Cho’s
artworks derive meaning not from their physical forms alone, but from the
speculative worlds in which they operate. Her process begins with fictional
writing that establishes a conceptual universe, within which she materializes
objects that can "function" in that world. In 《The Trace of Things Unmentioned》, for
instance, the artist embedded fictional characters and episodes into the real
site of an abandoned inn, allowing sculptural objects to act as narrative
carriers tied to place-specific histories.
As her
interest in the structure of information and the immaterial grew, her work
evolved accordingly. In 《Broken Reality》, she used hologram technology to visualize intangible yet present
phenomena, prompting viewers to confront the instability of information through
physical immersion. In 《Jumbo Shrimp》 (Artist Residency TEMI, 2021), clay sculptures engraved with
CAPTCHA patterns and net-like structures made of glass and metal alluded to how
fragmented emotions and memories are extracted, stored, and commodified within
digital systems.
From 2022
onward, the ‘Nudi Hallucination’ series merged scientific models with
fictional biologies to propose sculptural forms that hybridize biological and
digital bodies. Using diverse materials—glass, resin, metal, artificial
plants—Cho constructed lifeforms that metaphorically depict the internal
systems of post-human species. Nudi Hallucination
#1 (2022), for example, features a curved glass structure that
houses neuron-like filaments, evoking data-embedded organisms inspired by
marine invertebrates.
This
formal language reaches new levels of complexity in 《Altered Fluid》. By working with
high-temperature materials like stainless steel and glass—substances that
replace protein-based flesh—Cho reimagines the body as a semi-solid,
shape-shifting entity. The resulting sculptures, reminiscent of Paleozoic
organisms, suggest future lifeforms capable of adapting to hostile environments
and evolving outside the logic of human biology.