Open 10:00–18:00
Artist
GR1Exhibition Title
《Grrr!》Date
2026. 01. 28 - 03. 28Venue
OCI Museum of ArtGrrr!
Visible Voices
Introduction
Growing up with a love for comics and hip-hop,
GR1[1] created his first
graffiti work in 2000, during his teenage years in his hometown of Busan. From
that moment, he set out on an adventure driven by a singular ambition: to leave
his mark as widely as possible, in places as dangerous as possible. After graduating
from university and taking a position at a newspaper in Chicago, he continued
to sketch after work and roam the streets on weekends, continuing his graffiti
practice. One episode he can now recall with a smile recounts the day he was
arrested after trespassing into an abandoned factory and climbing along stair
handrails all the way to the eighth floor to leave his mark. Yet, when
recalling how tense and dangerous those moments truly were, such courage,
however reckless it may appear, is difficult to romanticize. Even so, he did
not give up graffiti. On the contrary, he gripped the spray can all the more
tightly.
At times, the trajectory of GR1’s life may
sound like a legend or a fable. Yet it is not a heroic tale, but rather a
chronicle of the graffiti-inflected attitude he has consistently put into
practice. This solo exhibition traces the point at which that attitude
coalesces into a grammar, and where that grammar is articulated as visual art.
Chapter 1. The Expansion of Graffiti
While GR1’s work is firmly rooted in graffiti,
it does not remain confined to that identity. His practice is not limited to
two-dimensional painting, but expands across a range of media and forms, moving
fluidly through and across the boundaries of artistic genres.
After producing graffiti at an explosive pace
across Korea, the United States, and other parts of Asia, he began around 2013
to undertake a series of large-scale graffiti projects in major cities
throughout East Asia, each organized around a specific theme or narrative. Work
from the streets, reconfigured through the grammar of painting, naturally
transitions into the realm of fine art. Graffiti imbued with narrative no
longer remains a spontaneous trace, but evolves into a formal language that
structures the pictorial surface.
His 2019 solo exhibition at the SOMA Drawing Center marked his
entry into the institutional art world in earnest. The pronounced sense of
speed and the density that fills the pictorial surface in GR1’s paintings,
together with the explosive, single-stroke gestures that stand in stark
contrast to calm and refined brushwork, can be understood as the condensed
result of momentum and energy accumulated through years of working with his
entire body against massive walls. His work is also marked by a striking
immediacy. Rather than conceptual art whose meaning is difficult to grasp
readily, it operates in a manner that can register instantaneously, even when
glimpsed in passing from a moving vehicle. This aspect is closely tied to the
inherent qualities of graffiti itself. The same holds true at the material level.
Rather than relying on traditional painterly materials, GR1 primarily works
with spray paint and acrylic markers, materials that foreground the
medium-specific characteristics of graffiti.
What is particularly noteworthy in his
paintings is his method of production. While he works on canvas, a support
traditionally used in painting, he subjects the surface to a distinct
preparatory treatment before the work itself begins. He often applies acrylic
mediums to create a rough, uneven texture on the surface of the canvas. This is
an attempt to translate onto the painted surface the heterogeneous and coarse
materiality of walls, the sites where graffiti is typically produced.
Graffiti artists each establish a distinctive
style, which they repeatedly employ. GR1’s graffiti style is composed of sharp,
jagged lines that erupt in rapid succession, radiating outward like lightning
branching in all directions. These characteristics extend across his entire
fine art practice. In painting, they appear in the form of triangles and
polygons, while in sculpture they primarily take shape as horn-like structures.
As visual forms derived from graffiti extend across different media, they give rise
to a consistent formal grammar that runs through GR1’s work as a whole.
To emphasize this point once more, his
paintings do not merely translate graffiti onto the pictorial surface. Rather,
what his practice ultimately pursues is an expansive attitude that extends
beyond the outward form and operational boundaries of graffiti to encompass its
very subjects. Through this process, GR1 ensures that graffiti does not remain
a mere image, but is instead transformed into a practical methodology. As a
result, graffiti expands and evolves into a viable formal principle within
contemporary art.
Chapter 2. GR1 Was Here
Stray Dogs
Grrr! offers a concentrated overview of GR1’s
work, spanning from the moment he first began making graffiti to the present
day. Barking Dogs (2025), the
work that greets visitors at the entrance to the exhibition, immediately
imprints GR1’s identity. Reminiscent of Cerberus, the guardian of the gates of
hell, these dogs visually embody the growling sound “grrr!” as in the
exhibition title.
If Cerberus is the guardian of the gates of
hell, then what is GR1 guarding? He likens figures from the streets to untamed
stray dogs. This, however, is not a declaration of indiscriminate aggression.
The stray dogs he gives form to are figures that growl not in order to destroy,
but to protect and to reveal, confronting the violence of systems that divide
the mainstream from the margins. The subjects that appear in his work are
likewise those who linger at the edges of society, who disappear, are forgotten,
or ultimately remain on the periphery, unseen and unacknowledged. In this way,
GR1 consistently summons into his work those that have remained on the
periphery. Throughout this process, a sense of solidarity with subcultures and
marginalized beings functions as a central force driving his practice. By
bringing them into the space of the artwork, he articulates a clear assertion
of presence, declaring that they were undeniably here.
The fluorescent orange that repeatedly appears
in his work likewise condenses this attitude. GR1 actively draws on the
properties of safety orange, a high-visibility color commonly used in
construction workwear, road signage, and safety or rescue equipment, to ensure
immediate and unmistakable recognition even amid darkness and danger.
Recognized before it is read and impossible to ignore, this intense orange hue
functions in his work as a
“visible voice.”
Record and Accumulation
Street graffiti is inherently ephemeral. It is
erased and overwritten, repeating cycles of creation and disappearance.
Therefore, GR1 maintains an obsessive attitude toward documentation, seeking to
preserve every phase of his work, from its inception and process to its
outcome, in both material and immaterial forms. Archiving photographic images
of his graffiti by date is a fundamental part of his practice. He also
preserves the traces left behind after each act of production, including empty
spray cans and even the cloths used to wipe away pigment, treating the refuse
generated in the process itself as an integral part of the record. This
attitude has been sustained for more than two decades. The vast body of
materials that he has meticulously recorded and collected over this time has
naturally accumulated into an archive of monumental scale.
While preparing this exhibition with GR1, I was
often surprised by his exceptional qualities. Among these moments, one work in
particular has remained especially vivid in my memory. In 1999, when he first
resolved to pursue graffiti, his very first sketch for a work consisted of the
word “KOREA,” written in pen on a sheet of paper. GR1 has preserved the
original sketch to this day, and in this exhibition presents a scanned version
of it as a work in its own right.
Whether he recognized the importance of
materials from an early age and intentionally archived them, or whether the
sketch simply survived by chance, is something only GR1 himself can know. Yet
the fact that he has preserved this early sketch to the present day, as if
anticipating a future in which he would move between the street and the
institution, serves as a symbolic testament to GR1’s unwavering commitment to
record-keeping.
Because he has documented the process itself
with such meticulous care, we are able to glimpse not only the countless
graffiti works GR1 has left behind, but also the journeys leading to their
creation and the traces of episodes accumulated through working alongside his
peers. Archives 2000–2025 (2025), a photographic archive spanning a
fifteen-meter-long wall, brings together in a single site the records of GR1’s
graffiti practice from its inception to the present, including his first sketch
(1999), his first graffiti work (2000), and the numerous projects he has
carried out across cities around the world. It extends even to emblematic
moments such as climbing stair railings in an abandoned factory in Chicago,
unfolding over time as a vivid, unfiltered chronicle of GR1’s artistic life
lived in and through graffiti.
Defrag–Walls, Cans (2025), which elevates
the byproducts of graffiti into artworks, and Defrag–Stickers (2025), in
which hundreds of tags and stickers by anonymous individuals are affixed to
canvas, directly reveal the obsessive, collector-like dimension of GR1’s
practice. These two works focus not on completed images, but on the remnants
and traces left behind in the processes through which graffiti is produced and
erased.
The 156 works that comprise Defrag-Walls,
Cans incorporate spent spray cans and fragments of graffiti-covered walls
collected from the street. In particular, the wall fragments are partially
ground down, exposing the accumulated layers of pigment and, with them, the
repeated acts of covering and overpainting that are intrinsic to graffiti. The
layers of color, accumulated like strata of time, bring anonymous histories to
the surface. Defrag-Stickers is a work that gathers traces of tagging, a
practice within graffiti culture used to swiftly inscribe a pseudonym or an
icon. Stickers reading “GR1 Was Here,” once affixed to various urban fixtures,
along with tags left by innumerable anonymous individuals, have been removed
and densely affixed to the canvas. These small marks, once passed by without a
second glance, are here transformed into collective traces and accumulated
records. Thus, GR1 bears witness to lives that were unmistakably here, through
acts of recording and reactivating traces that would otherwise evaporate.
Chapter 3. They Were Here
Recording the Face: People, I Know and People, Like This
GR1 situates himself on the threshold between
the mainstream and the margins, between the center and the periphery. From this
liminal position, he has continually fixed his attention on those rendered
invisible by dominant social norms. People, I Know (2014–2016) is a
project in which GR1 rendered fellow artists from his immediate circle,
particularly figures closely connected to subcultural scenes, as street art
across the streets of major cities in East Asia. He documented all of these
works through photography at the time.
Nearly a decade later, in 2025, GR1 returned to
these figures in the form of canvas paintings titled People, Like This
(2025). This time, the pictorial field is populated by individuals rooted in
non mainstream cultural spheres, including tattoo artists, punk musicians, and
cosplayers. Photographs taken between 2014 and 2016 are presented alongside
paintings produced in 2025. The historical traces carried by the photographic
works flow throughout the exhibition space, while the paintings, standing at
its center, assert themselves with the solidity of alleyway walls. In this
manner, GR1 calls these hidden faces back into view, bearing witness once more
to the fact that they were here and that they remain here still.
City, Identity, and Narratives from the Margins: Osakascape-JUSTMEET
Since 2018, GR1 has been developing the Cityscape
series, which interrogates the value of subcultural presences excluded by the
city. Seoulscape marks the point of departure for this series,
translating onto canvas the traces of graffiti left on back alleys and walls,
and revealing the concealed underside of a city commonly perceived as
glamorous. In Red Hong Kong (2023), an extension of the series, GR1
juxtaposes scenes from the democracy movement with Hong Kong’s alleyways,
rendering the collisions produced by shifting balances and imbalances of power
as a single urban landscape.
In Osakascape–JUSTMEET (2025), GR1 further narrows his gaze from the structure of the
city to the narrative of an individual. The work centers on Shimomura Koichi (下村
宏一), a third-generation Zainichi Korean graffiti artist known by
the name JUSTMEET, with whom GR1 has maintained a long-standing exchange since
2007. Osakascape–JUSTMEET is composed of two media: video and painting.
In the video installation, a two-channel presentation interweaves a
documentary—featuring episodes and interviews from JUSTMEET's journey to his
grandfather's homeland, Jeju—with footage documenting his graffiti process on
the island. The work confronts viewers with the identity of those who exist in
the interstices of society, displaced from the center yet undeniably real. In
the paintings, scenes of Osaka’s backstreets are juxtaposed with photographs
from JUSTMEET’s childhood. These subtly misaligned images metaphorically
articulate an individual identity that can never fully align with society.
Remnant Landscapes: NEW GARDEN
Sharp wooden forms fill the exhibition space.
The pointed shapes that define GR1’s graffiti style, radiating outward like
lightning, break free from the flat plane and proliferate into three
dimensional structures. Across the floor, weeds painted onto pentagonal forms
spread densely, leaving scarcely any space to step. Rising among them are
hexagonal sculptures reaching heights of up to 250 centimeters, evoking the
presence of ancient, tree-like trunks. Fabricated from cut plywood, the
surfaces of these works are layered with images evocative of vandalism,
including barbed wire, tagging, and forcefully sprayed drawings.
Particularly striking are the approximately
sixty triangular pyramids dispersed throughout the exhibition space. Crafted
from leftover plywood generated in the production of the pentagonal and
hexagonal structures, these forms begin at the periphery and gradually come to
occupy the space in its entirety. This landscape vividly demonstrates GR1’s
artistic practice of persistently redirecting what once remained at the margins
toward the center of perception.
Conclusion
GR1 now appears as an artist who has acquired
the flexibility and resilience to move strategically between graffiti and fine
art, between the street and the institution. Yet the first line of his
extensive biography remains unchanged: ”First graffiti work on the street in 2000 ” This is less
a statement intended to define his identity than a declaration of resolve, an
enduring commitment to continue working through a graffiti-based mode of
practice and attitude.
Returning once more to the exhibition title, Grrr!
is not a simple cry of resistance. It is an act of inscribing presence, of
leaving marks while knowing they will be erased, and of repeating gestures
while knowing they may not be heard. It is a statement left in form rather than
words, a visible voice that appears directly before our eyes.
[1] GR1 is the artist’s graffiti moniker. It is a compound name formed
from the letters “G” and “R” from graffiti and the numeral “1,”
signifying “No. 1” or “Only One.” The artist prefers the name to be written in
Korean.
GR1
tagjial@gmail.com | @grone.kr | www.grone.kr
Born in Busan, Lives in Seoul and works
across various cities
First graffiti work on the street in
2000
Solo
Exhibitions
2026 Grrr!, OCI Museum of Art,
Seoul
2023 Diagonal,
Art Centre Art Moment, Seoul
2021 Crashing
Grass, Cheongju Art Studio, Cheongju
2019 Dogs
without Leash, SOMA Drawing Center, Seoul
Selected Group
Exhibitions
2025 Crossed Spaces, Spacemom Museum of Art,
Cheongju
Artist residency
TEMI final show - GARDEN, Daejeon Artist’s House, Daejeon
Flexible Space : Contemporal Dialogue,
Gyodong Museum of Art, Jeonju
Street of Summer, Shinsegae
Gallery Gwangju, Gwangju
Metaphysics of Memory, Factory of Contemporary Arts in Palbok,
Jeonju
2024 Sound Colors, Emotion Brushes, Suchang Youth Mansion,
Daegu
on second thought, Culture Platform S1472,
Seoul
INFLECTION POINT,
Gallery Ja Yu, Seoul
Expansion and
Contraction of time, Space55, Seoul
Between, Loose knots, Factory of Contemporary Arts in Palbok,
Jeonju
2023 Digging, Daegu Art Factory, Daegu
BPAW3,
Total museum metaverse, Online Exhibition
Extension, Artist Residency TEMI,
Daejeon
The Spirit of Memorializing,
Lee Han Yeol Memorial Museum, Seoul
2022 Gaps, Space 55, Seoul
My Travel with the Artist, Gimhae Hanok
Experience Center, Gimhae
Question and Art, museum soda, Hwaseong
For 1000days,
Jeon tae-il Memorial Hall, Seoul
Documenta 15, Cheongju Art Studio,
Cheongju
2021 Start Line, Shinsegae Gallery Centum, Busan
Masque.pa.rade, Hangaram Design Museum,
Seoul
Sounds of the Blue Marble: Mourning the Anthropocene, Seoul
National University Museum of Art, Seoul
Song from Gwangju, Indi Art hall Gong, Seoul
DEAD POINT AND
SECOND WIND, SOMA, Seoul
CRE8TIVE REPORT, OCI
Museum of Art, Seoul
Undoing, space imsi, Incheon
et al.
Projects
2025 Museum
Week 2025 'Museum × Enjoy' Special Exhibition 《Tradition + Modernity: Hide and Seek》, Factory of Contemporary Arts in Palbok, Jeonju
2023 24 Hours of Seoul, Seoul Metropolitan
Government&Samsung C&T, Seoul
2022 Graffiti
Project 《ST-ART SASANG》, CATs
Sasang Indie Station, Busan
Creative plan b Project 《Shin Choryang Archive》,
Creative plan b Project, Hansung1918 Lifestyle Culture Center, Busan
#&#&#,
Domansa, Seoul
2020 Seoul
Peace-Culture Festival, Peace Culture Bunker, Seoul
2019 Street
Art Festival 《POW! WOW! KOREA》, around Seongsu-dong, Seoul
Urban Rhythm and Artistic Action, Haedong Art
& Culture Platform, Damyang
2018 〈The things
that we gave up〉, 2018 Ansan Street Arts Festival, Ansan
Culture Plaza, Ansan
2017 Street
Art Festival 《Wallskar》, Nanxian,
China
Style
frame : Daily drawing project, Indi Art hall Gong, Seoul
2016 Street
Art Festival 《HK Walls》, Sham shui
pho Area, Hongkong, China
2015 Street
Art, Suwon IPark Museum of Art, Suwon
et al.
Residencies
2025 Artist
Residency TEMI, Daejeon
2024 Factory
of Contemporary Arts in Palbok, Jeonju
2023 Daegu
Art Factory, Daegu
2021 Cheongju
Art Studio, Cheongju
2020 OCI
Museum of Art Residency, Incheon
Awards / Honors
2025 Selected
as the Artist of the Year by Chongkundang Art Prize, Chongkundang Holdings, Seoul
2023 Selected for SFAC Art Support Program,
Seoul Foundation for Arts and Culture, Seoul
2021 Selected for BFAC Art-Corporate cooperation
Support Program, Busan
Cultural Foundation, Busan
2018 Selected for SOMA Drawing
Center Exhibition Support, SOMA Drawing Center, Seoul
Publications
2017 JIALONE BY GR1, Busan Cultural Foundation
2016 The place now disappeared, Busan Cultural Foundation
2015 41 people who GR1 met, Busan Cultural Foundation
2008 DRIP magazine #1, #2, Personal Publication
Collaboration
Adidas, BGZT Lab, CocaCola, ChupaChups, FastFive, GS25, Guinness,
Helinox, Kia Motors, Monster Energy, Nike, On the Spot, PUBG, Samsung C&T, Vans,
et al.
Collections
MMCA
Artbank, Daerim Saint Mary’s Hospital, VANS Korea, OCI Museum of Art