Sungermone Turns the Gallery Into a Zoo Where Humans Are the Exhibit

by OS Staff
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Human beings love to imagine themselves as evolved creatures. Rational, civilised, separate from the animal world. But Sungermone’s Homo Animalis begins with a more uncomfortable suspicion: maybe the distance was never that great.

Installed at Galerie Noir in Seoul, the exhibition brings together hybrid figures that blur the line between human and animal, turning the body into a site of instinct, performance, and unease. These are not creatures from fantasy in the decorative sense. They feel more like distorted mirrors, showing the impulses that remain underneath social polish: hunger, fear, desire, dominance, vulnerability. 

The show’s central reversal is simple but sharp. Instead of humans looking at animals as objects of curiosity, Homo Animalis imagines a world where that gaze turns back on us. The viewer is no longer safely outside the cage. They become part of the spectacle, caught in the same system of watching, judging, ranking, and being watched. 

That idea gives the exhibition its contemporary bite. In Sungermone’s world, civilisation does not cancel out instinct. It only gives it better lighting. Beneath the surfaces of modern life sit older forces: competitiondesirehierarchy, and the need to survive inside systems we pretend are rational. The animal is not behind us. It is still moving through us. 

The location deepens the tension. Galerie Noir, Songzio’s art-fashion space in Dosan Park, operates somewhere between a gallery and a flagship environment, continuing the Korean house’s broader attempt to fuse fashionart, and spatial experience. That hybridity suits the work. The exhibition itself feels like a crossing point: between body and beast, instinct and intellect, display and confession. 

Homo Animalis is on view at Galerie NoirSeoul, from March 20 to May 29, 2026.

Photos: Photography by Roster – Courtesy of Galerie Noir

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