
is a visual artist based in Seoul. Trained in Oriental Painting and Metalwork, her interdisciplinary practice encompasses video, sculpture, and text. Drawing on field research and material experimentations, Oh explores tensions between original and replica, constructing poetic assemblages that oscillate between critique and irony.
Silvery Trail follows the spectral return of the lenok fish, once believed extinct in South Korea due to mining pollution and habitat loss. Set in Daehyeon-ri, a village overshadowed by an abandoned zinc mine, the film captures empty housing blocks, a faint waterfall, and a school-turned-campsite. Against this ghostly backdrop, a genetically distinct lenok population quietly survived. Oh reflects on ecological memory and resilience, questioning linear narratives of extinction and revival. By staging a tension between artificial restoration and overlooked continuities, Silvery Trail highlights more-than-human survival amid degradation.
Silvery Trail, 2024, 11 min 15 sec, Single channel video, colour, sound, 4K.
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