Jeongkeun
Lee’s work is centered on photography, yet its form increasingly takes on
sculptural and installation-based characteristics. In the early ‘Personal
Ritual’ series, he created ritualistic spaces through installations that
combined transparent plastic gloves, natural elements, air, and water. During
this period, his work focused on constructing invisible beliefs and emotions
visually through the combination of photography and installation.
In the
works from 2022—PPI +
MeandmE(2022), Ni-Alloy+My giraffe
drawing(2022), Mig01+Thunderbolt(2022),
and Rover413+Almagest(2022)—the method of combining
image and frame is more fully developed. The titles themselves are formed by
merging the names of the image and the frame, allowing the two to be perceived
as a single structure. In
particular, Mig01+Thunderbolt expands the visual experience
by connecting the properties of the image with a kinetic frame that moves vertically.
A key
feature of this period is the use of the “MacGuffin” device. Moving frames or
exaggerated structures are not essential to the narrative, yet they function to
attract the viewer’s attention. Rather than directly explaining meaning, these
devices operate as mechanisms that generate motivation for viewing and induce
sensory immersion.
In 《SUPERNATURAL》, this strategy is intensified.
Works such as Temptation
trap(2023), Cleaning under rain(2023),
and Water world(2023) present staged natural images
within flamboyant and exaggerated metal frames. The surfaces of the frames
emphasize material traces such as grinder marks and reflective effects,
creating strong visual tension with the images. Here, the photograph is no
longer central but generates meaning through its relationship with the exterior
structure.
In recent
works, this formal approach develops in a more organic direction.
In Drip Drop(2024) and Fore
primitive(2024), the frame transforms into forms that evoke animal or
human bodies, combining with the photograph to form a single “body.” Images
such as trails of light, scratched surfaces, and smoke emphasize tactile
qualities, expanding the work beyond vision into a sensory experience.