In the heart of the Yuz Museum, a vast mechanical pulse seems to come from an imagined elsewhere - Odyssey, the first major solo exhibition in China by Choe U-Ram, transforms the space into an ecosystem of kinetic creatures suspended between poetry and engineering. The Korean artist, celebrated for his mechanical lifeforms known as Anima-Machines, presents nearly twenty years of research into desire, civilization, and human fragility. His sculptures appear alive: thousands of components move in fluid sequences that mimic breathing, swimming, or dancing. Works such as Ouroboros (2012), a metallic serpent devouring itself, reflect on contemporary greed, Pavilion (2012) turns the idea of value into a dazzling, almost sacred object, Round Table (2022) stages social tensions - from labor to competition - through a mechanical choreography that mirrors the paradoxes of our time. But the emotional core of the exhibition is Little Ark (2022), a monumental vessel over twelve meters long, animated by 35 pairs of oars made from simple cardboard boxes. At rest, they form a silent wall, in motion, they become waves, heralding a collective journey toward an uncertain future. Nearby, works such as Lighthouse, Two Captains, Angel, and Infinite Space expand the metaphor: an odyssey not only cosmic but inner, shaped by choices, fears, and possibilities. In Odyssey, Choe U-Ram fuses technology and myth, desire and mechanics, inviting viewers to question the direction of their own path. His creatures do not offer answers - they open thresholds. And they ask us, with quiet unease, where we are willing to sail.
Viola Canova - © 2025 ARTE.it for Bvlgari Hotel Shanghai