Based on
feminist reflections on primordial space and identity, Soyoung Lee has explored
through sculpture and installation where the subject takes root and within what
kinds of relationships it is formed. In her early solo exhibition 《Return to Chora》(Kimsechoong Museum, 2019),
the artist used the feminine space of “chora” to reveal that identity is not
fixed, but is instead deconstructed and generated again.
Works from this period
imagine a primordial space before the subject separates from the other, through
forms reminiscent of umbilical cords, navels, and a mother’s breasts. For Lee,
femininity is not a specific image or biological condition, but a way of
thinking for rewriting existing language and social structures.
This
interest expands into the relationship between the individual, community, and
place in 《Belly Gap _ Record of Place》(CoSMo40, 2020). Through the bodily sign of the “navel,” the artist
deals with traces of existence that originate from another but remain after
separation. At a time when the sense of community implied by “we” can no longer
be maintained as a solid sameness, Lee examines through sculpture the subtle
distances and gaps between the city, community, and individual identity.
Later,
in 《Unrooted》(Cheongna Blue
Nova Hall, 2022) and 《From My Flowerpot》(Incheon Seo-gu Culture & Arts Center Art Gallery, 2022), she
addresses questions of rootedness and movement through the medium of the
flowerpot. Unrooted Pots_1(2021) and
Unrooted_2(2021) show that the ground of existence is not a
fixed land, but a place that can be chosen, moved, and placed again.
After
2023, the artist’s questions move toward the city, disappearance, and the time
of sculpture in formation. In the solo exhibition 《Fragile City》(Art Space Bullmoji, 2023), Lee
expressed the structures of cities that collapse and are rebuilt within cycles
of redevelopment and circulation through the formation and collapse of clay.
Fragile City 1(2023), Fragile City 2(2023),
and Fragile City 3(2024) reveal that cities and human lives
are not situated on stable foundations, but exist within ongoing processes of
movement, dismantling, and reconstruction.
In 《Making
the Ended Road》(Space Beam, 2025), she explores
threshold spaces in Incheon, such as the ends of roads, ports, embankments, and
tidal flats, returning the spatial image of the “ended road” to a repeated
process of rebuilding and breaking. Walking on Mudflats(2024)
is a work that captures vanishing traces and the time just before formation
through the movements of the body, clay, and rising tide on the mudflats.