Mixed media
33 x 42 x 7 cm
Unique work
Certificate of authenticity included
Purchasing opens late 2025. Be the first to know!
Want a reminder? Join our mailing list.
This work is a sculptural metaphor that reveals the intangible authority and the illusion surrounding the image of that authority. By appropriating the form of a Joseon dynasty blue-and-white porcelain vase and reconstructing it using artificial and immaterial materials—such as digital prints, drawing, Vantablack, and styrofoam-the piece questions how traditional notions of beauty are transformed into consumable images. In particular, the dragon with five claws, once a symbol of high-ranking power, is reimagined here as an image marked by lightness and reproducibility. Ultimately, the work points to the idea that what we seek to possess is not the “real,” but the “image,” and that institutions like museums assign authority to such images, thereby generating new cultural myths. Furthermore, the piece exposes the magical power of images-their ability to replace reality and function as truth-and deconstructs the relationship between art and consumption, authority and illusion.
A long-standing collaborator in the evolving currents of modern art, Lee Jungyeol has devoted nearly four decades to joint explorations of memory, time, and the residual poetry of everyday objects. Beginning his artistic journey in his early twenties, Lee has forged a practice that privileges dialogue, shared vision, and the collective reimagining of the overlooked. Drawing on nearly six decades of life experience, he stands as a testament to the power of sustained inquiry and the quiet revolution of found materials. Central to Lee’s oeuvre is an almost archaeological fascination with the “abandoned” and “unmemorialised”—fragments that bear the imprint of functionality yet have slipped beyond our conscious regard. His acclaimed work Cement Monitor exemplifies this ethos. By returning actual coffee cups to the very marks left by their predecessors, Lee stages a poignant act of restitution: not simply resurrecting a lost form, but evoking the unconscious yearnings, authorities, and desires that once animated these vessels. In his own words, “It is not a Starbucks, but a self-portrait and interpretation of a modern person who wants to look like a Starbucks,” underscoring how personal identity, corporate symbolism, and collective memory coalesce in the residue of daily ritual. Collectors and fellow artists alike are drawn to Lee Jungyeol’s work for its subtle alchemy—transforming industrial detritus into carriers of contemporary longing. His practice remains rooted in collaboration and experimentation, inviting us to reconsider what we discard, what we memorialise, and the hidden narratives encoded in the traces of time.