Weon Rhee

Weon Rhee explores the tension between growth and decay, formation and collapse, working within the liminal space where organic and structural forces remain in flux. His sculptural practice foregrounds incompletion, fracture, and imperfection-not as shortcomings, but as sites of generative potential. This interest in instability, both as a natural state and a philosophical condition, underpins a body of work that is at once materially rigorous and emotionally resonant.
 
Raised on a family-run mushroom farm, Rhee developed an early sensitivity to the cycles of organic transformation. This formative relationship with decay and regeneration informs a continued engagement with materials marked by time, damage, or neglect. Industrial remnants and discarded fragments are chosen precisely for their flaws-physical evidence of entropy and resilience.
 
As a neurodivergent artist with ADHD, Rhee experiences the world through a heightened sensory field. Subtle shifts in light, sound, and surface register with emotional intensity, prompting an intuitive, tactile approach to making. The work often reflects these internal complexities through layered compositions and charged material contrasts.
 
For Weon Rhee, making is not a quest for resolution, but a form of inquiry-an attempt to understand the ever-evolving state of things. Each piece exists as a record of process and perception, revealing a quiet, persistent dialogue between fragility and endurance, entropy and regeneration.