Fujiroseiji Bukchon Space: Where Memories and Sensations Meet

Bukchon is a place that always makes you feel like you're walking back in time. The rooflines of traditional Korean houses cascade in layers, and old stories seem to whisper in your ear every time you turn a corner. The moment I entered Bukchon, a building with unfamiliar sensations, quite different from the tranquility of the Hanok, caught my eye. It was the Fujiroseiji Bukchon Space.
From the outside, it had a cold, metallic texture and colorful exhibition posters, but inside, it held a story of amazing transformation. Originally, it was a bathhouse that opened in 1969, and it was reborn as an exhibition space in 2022. The place where people used to cleanse their bodies has now become an art space that cleanses the mind.
Stepping inside, I found modern pop art pieces hanging in a space where old bricks and traces of plumbing remained intact. For a moment, I felt like I was caught in a layering of time. "The space, once filled with steam and water sounds, is now filled with color and light."

The exhibition was largely divided into the worlds of two artists.
First, the works of artist Lee Dong-gi caught my eye. Bold lines, intense colors, and cute characters that seemed familiar appeared all over the screen. It was as if a scene from an animation was frozen on the canvas, yet at the same time, it had a vibrant, living quality. Smiling and chattering expressions, humorous scenes of eating ramen, characters standing in flower gardens… each one seemed to awaken childhood innocence, yet subtly satirize the speed of modern society.

On the other hand, Fujiroseiji's works were a little more lyrical and dreamy. Shining flower gardens, hot air balloons flying in the sky, and small beings floating above the city. Within them, there was a warmth that felt like opening a childhood fairytale book again, and a warmth of fantasy that bloomed even in the coldness of the city.

After enjoying the works, I took a break and stood by the window, where a landscape of Bukchon's rooftops cascading like waves unfolded before my eyes. Heavy tiles stretched under the gray sky, and trees peeked out from between them. The dramatic contrast between the atmosphere inside and outside the exhibition seemed to highlight each other even more.

And in the final moment, I drank a glass of misutgaru (roasted grain powder drink) served in the small café space. The savory and subtle sweetness enveloped my mouth, and the works I had just seen and the Bukchon scenery melted together, seeping in warmly. It was as if today had become a page in an exhibition catalog, a perfectly finishing moment.

Fujiroseiji Bukchon Space.
This place was not just a space to see paintings, but a small universe where the past and present, the ordinary and the fantastic, tradition and modernity were layered upon each other.













































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