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Artist Daniel Arsham imagines Seoul in 3024 for exhibition at Lotte Museum of Art ′′Amethyst Crystallized Seated Pikachu′′ (2020) by Daniel Arsham [SHIN MIN-HEE] The Lotte Museum of Art in Songpa District, southern Seoul, has recently undergone renovations to become a white excavation site filled with corroded sculptures portraying Venus of Milo, ancient Roman busts and...

Pokémon? These so-called relics by Daniel Arsham may not have actually existed in the past, but they are the 43-year-old artist’s ideas of what the future may look like. Some 250 of his “fictional archeology” pieces are now on view in his “Seoul 3024” exhibition at the museum. For over two decades, Arsham has been reproducing cultural icons by casting them in raw materials like volcanic ash, amethyst and calcite.



They seem so lifelike that it’s easy to believe that they are actual historical artifacts with their surfaces eroded and displaying cracks as if they were damaged by some supernatural force. Installation view of ′′Seoul 3024,′′ the solo exhibition of Daniel Arsham at the Lotte Museum of Art in Songpa District, southern Seoul [SHIN MIN-HEE] “When we see objects in our life rendered in this fashion, it’s very confusing,” Arsham said during a press conference at the museum last week. “I think the beauty of the work lies in this confusion.

” The whole concept behind his fictional archeology concept began in 2010, after he visited an excavation site on Easter Islan.

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