
About this Artist
Korean artist Sangho Bang crafts universes where the grotesque dances with the sublime, and holes—endless, hypnotic portals—invite viewers to tumble into dimensions unbound by scale or logic. His work, a riotous fusion of “space-acid” aesthetics and microscopic intricacy, conjures what he calls a “cosmic primordial soup”: a realm where definition dissolves, and the fabric of reality unravels into infinite possibility.
Trained as a freelance illustrator, Bang’s surreal vision has propelled collaborations with global brands, from animating vast digital installations for Hong Kong’s Sogo department store to designing psychedelic loop pedals for Fender. Yet his breakthrough arrived at San Diego Comic Con 2022, where he merged his hallucinatory planets with Adult Swim’s Rick & Morty for a carnival-themed series. The synergy was uncanny. “I’d never seen the show before,” Bang admits. “But our worlds shared a DNA—absurdity, multiplicity, existential chaos.” His response? A visual symbiosis where his art parasitized the show’s universe, or vice versa.
Central to Bang’s ethos are holes—celestial gateways bridging the colossal and the cellular. A planet might double as a sweater’s thread under magnification; a crater could lead to a subatomic realm. “Every object has its own holes,” he explains. “They’re passages to worlds too vast or minuscule to comprehend.” This philosophy pulses through projects like Pink Pupil, an ongoing book and film starring a proxy of the artist herself: a woman who escapes societal constraints via a planet-shaped lens, becoming “addicted” to Bang’s own botanical dimensions. “Drawing is my escape,” he reflects. “She embodies that flight.”
Color orchestrates Bang’s chaos. Rejecting minimalism, he layers hues until they vibrate in discordant harmony. “I let them clash, then coalesce,” he says. This chromatic alchemy translates seamlessly to animation, apparel, and murals, each piece a kaleidoscopic invitation to wander.
In Bang’s universe, beauty is a slippery, shapeshifting force—a cell’s structure mirrors a galaxy; a pupil blooms into a portal. His work dares us to peer into the abyss, not with fear, but with the thrill of what might peer back.








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