Junhyeok Jang splices up nature photography then reassembles the peices to make graphic animals
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Junhyeok Jang splices up nature photography then reassembles the peices to make graphic animals
"How does a photograph of melting snow turn into the silhouette of a polar bear? This is something only the artist Junhyeok Jang - who creates multi-layered graphic and photographic works - can answer. It all begins with his film camera: "I capture everyday moments and later extract fragments from these images to reinterpret as visual graphics," he says. Addressing themes of environment awareness, collective memory and nostalgia, Junhyeok's work are a corridor to connect two mediums, and the natural and digital worlds."
"Junhyeok reframes the ordinary, opening the door to new meanings and associations. Using different textures and fragments, his fused photographic materials and act as "visual translations to encourage viewers to reflect on both the fragility of nature and the persistence of memory", Junhyeok says. Junhyeok's reinterpretations repurpose the old as new, producing compositions with depth and sharpness. But, these are more than pixelated experiments:"
Film camera captures everyday moments; fragments are later extracted and reinterpreted as visual graphics. Photographic fragments of melting snow can be reworked into silhouettes, creating layered juxtapositions between organic forms and graphic motifs. Works address environmental awareness, collective memory, and nostalgia by connecting natural and digital realms. Fused photographic materials and varied textures function as visual translations that encourage reflection on the fragility of nature and the persistence of memory. Reinterpretations repurpose the old as new, producing compositions with depth and sharpness. The resulting pieces aim to resonate through shared experiences while delivering subtle but essential messages about environmental concerns.
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