Eunsol Lee
is an artist who has consistently focused on the ontological conditions of the
digital age. A turning point in her practice was an incident in 2017, when her
personal Instagram account was involuntarily altered—its name changed to
“Kimberly” through hacking. From that point, the virtual character “Kimberly
Lee,” which began appearing in her works, took root not simply as an avatar but
as a digital lifeform that mediates the artist’s reflections and creations.
Early works such as Happy Easter(2020–) treat this intruding
digital object as a form of life, contemplating autonomy and conditions of
existence within the digital world.
This
ontological inquiry is materialized through its relationship with technological
infrastructure. In the solo exhibition 《KIMBERLY EXTRACT》(SeMA Storage, Seoul,
2021), Kimberly is repeatedly placed in situations where she must survive
between real-world spaces and digital environments. In these works, Kimberly
often appears only as a head, raising the question of whether identity and
consciousness can persist without a physical body. This philosophical
investigation is particularly deepened in I want to be a cephalopod(2021),
where references to traditional soul theory and bodily transplantation
experiments are made.
Lee also
employs the notion of “managing” a virtual identity to depict contemporary
conditions where the boundaries between self and other, reality and virtuality,
have become increasingly blurred. Popcorn Prophet trailer 001(2020–)
illustrates the crisis and survival of a virtual character within a constructed
reality based on the Unity engine, thereby raising questions about unstable
technological environments and the mutability of selfhood. Through such works,
the artist tracks and reconstructs the ethical and technical conditions that
allow digital entities to “exist” within a contemporary social framework.
In her recent works, the
focus shifts toward the possibility of digital beings forming communal
relationships. In the group exhibition 《Grid Island》(Seoul Museum of Art, Seoul, 2022), the work Kimberly &
Friends(2022) explores how the virtual lifeform Kimberly operates
within a collaborative, multi-agent system—particularly the structure of a
Decentralized Autonomous Organization (DAO). This suggests a shift in the
artist’s interest from individual existence to network-based relationality and
decentralization