From the family garden of their childhood to their own private garden in adulthood, Se Oh has cultivated a deep understanding of existence through their dialogue with plants. Tending a garden demands patience and time—what life stirs beneath the soil? What rewards come from labor? How does one learn the needs and cycles of living things? In the garden, plants cease to be distant entities; they impose a sense of responsibility. “One cannot impose their will on a garden, only gently guide and collaborate with it.” Plants grow on their own; bees and butterflies arrive in their own time. Here, humans learn to relinquish control. Yet encounters between plants are fleeting—two dewdrop-laden petals brushing, two vines entwining in their compete for sunlight. These moments, never to recur, briefly gorgeous, marks moments in time that was, is, and will never be again. In the cyclical withering and blooming of plants, Se Oh’s sensitivity to nature’s temporality resonates with the East Asian aesthetics of mono no aware (the pathos of things) and wabi-sabi (imperfect transience). Like the ceramic materials they choose—fragile yet resilient—their work embodies the paradox of life itself, ever-changing yet part of an intricate web of existence.
Se Oh employs materials tied to Korean and Asian traditions as a means of reconnecting with their heritage. Their abstract interpretations of natural forms emerge through the malleability of porcelain. Ceramics, in their hands, unify softness and strength, delicacy and resilience. Vessel rims flare like blossoms or curling tendrils, their fluid forms evoking life’s ephemerality while celebrating the irreplicable “trace of the hand.” They reimagine classic Korean ceramic shapes using bone-white American clay—a medium that perfectly encapsulates Se Oh’s quest for "who I am."
Porcelain, with its memory-like quality, records every subtle shift in the artist’s intention during creation. As a lump of clay spins and yields to their fingers, its paper-thin walls reveal the whorls of their touch. The material transcends its physicality, becoming a vessel for emotion and time. Controlling clay demands presence—an intimate dialogue with life: How does one collaborate, rather than dominate? When to let go and when does control yield to the material’s will? Unglazed surfaces, warm as skin, soften porcelain’s typically cold rigidity. The marks of Se Oh’s hands and tools—grooves, ridges, asymmetries—become a visual language that honors fragility within resilience, mirroring life itself.
In contrast to ceramics, Se Oh’s paintings on traditional Korean hanji (mulberry paper) embrace opacity and transience. Washes of wild green bloom across fibrous sheets, their brushstrokes quivering like leaves in the wind. Rippling textures suggest growth, expansion. Se Oh’s small-scale paperworks capture microscopic universes observed in childhood through their adoptive mother’s biologist lenses: algae swirl like nebulae, organisms pulse in a drop of pond water. Microscopic and macroscopic rhythms converge, reminding viewers of the physical and emotional ties binding all life. Both paintings and ceramics freeze motion into permanence—suspending fleeting, ever-shifting states to create a slow, profound sense of time. Se Oh’s works are not representations of reality, but echoes of humanity’s relationship with time, self, and nature.
For Se Oh, Bangkok’s human inhabitants mirror its ecosystem—vibrant, diverse, forever intertwined with clashing notions deriving from both local and faraway influences. The exhibition’s title, "Polyculture," derives from agricultural polycropping, where diverse plants thrive together, mimicking natural ecosystems to enhance production efficiency. Poly- (many) and -culture (cultivation/civilization) reflect Se Oh’s belief that diversity is key to truly connecting with our human nature.: “Contrasting elements, ideas, religions; it fosters a dynamic experience that promotes thought and challenges pre-conceived notions. We live in uncertain times, where division threatens the cross-pollination of our diversity. It’s in these times more important than ever to foster conditions where diversity can be nurtured, just as horticulture continues to do in places like Thailand. This show celebrates the idea of polyculture, not merely as a way to witness and to connect with each other, but also to promote a culturally-rich existence, and a profound appreciation for humanity as a whole.”
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