Hansol Ryu
has developed her practice across video, drawing, installation, and
performance. In her early works, she directly presents the transformation and
disassembly of the body through moving image, actively employing low-budget
special effects and crude props. The exaggerated staging in Pong
Pong and Chrichri Meerychri
Stmas does not reinforce realism, but rather disrupts it,
prompting the viewer to recognize the materiality of the image itself.
A key
element in her work is the activation of tactile sensation. The body in her
videos is not merely visual, but is presented as something that seems
touchable—through stretching textures, bursting forms, and sticky surfaces.
This sensory mode operates in a manner similar to ASMR or mukbang videos,
extending beyond visual perception to induce physical responses in the viewer.
This
tendency becomes even more explicit in her sculptural works. In the exhibition 《Sticky》(MUMOKJEOCK, 2022), works such
as Pimple and Scalp
Carpet appear as enlarged or transformed parts of the body,
using materials such as latex, silicone, and sponge that emphasize tactile
qualities. These sculptures do not pursue the completeness of traditional
sculpture, but instead stimulate sensation through states of stickiness,
elasticity, and extension.
Furthermore,
her work is closer to an accumulation of scenes than to a linear narrative.
Events that unfold over time in video are compressed into singular moments in
sculpture, creating a condition in which multiple temporal images coexist
simultaneously. In 《Every Body,
Come On! Yo!》, these scenes are dispersed throughout
the space, leading the viewer to engage not with individual works, but with a
collective field of images on a sensory level.