Jason In Seong L
New York, NY, USA
Jason(In Seong) was born in June of 1995 in Seoul, South Korea.
He grew up as the second son of his family with a thriving imagination, under his mother Kim Sung Yun, who is also an artist. He began making photographs at the age of seventeen. As he experimented with his imaginations and conceptual ideas, his love of photography and filmmaking blossomed as he taught himself how to create freely.
Now 20, Jason is a freshman at Tisch School of the Arts of New York University and is working as a freelance artist- specializing in fine art photography and digital filmmaking. Jason is currently living and working near the New York City area, and is available for travel worldwide.

2015 - 'Silver Key' at 2015 Connecticut Art Awards, 2015 - ‘Finalist’ at One Eyeland Award, 2015 - 'Award of Recognition' at Best Shorts Competition, 2015 - The Pilgrimage Exhibited at Hartford Slipe Gallery, 2015 - Into The Time Published on ISO Magazine, 2013 - The Pilgrimage Exhibited at Moon Fine Art Gallary
- Arts
- Events
- Portrait
- Video capture

Into The Time
Jason In Seong L
"Into The Time" is a reflection on the present from the perspective of having examined the past. Historical architecture provides a setting for the flow of time. The people may suggest contemporaneity, but they exist as silhouettes, so one is not sure if they are figures from the present or vestiges of the past. I also decided to use black and white photography because while light encompasses all colors, the addition of all colors makes black and white.

Lost in Time
Jason In Seong L
In the contemporary society, Jewish community is an unorthodox group. Isolating themselves from the rest of the society, Jewish people form a unique community. Because of the distinctness of its culture and attire, the Jewish neighborhood gives off a vibe that forces its visitors to go through an illusory experience of visiting a nation within a nation, living in their own time. As a result, when looking upon the photographs, the audiences of the photographs are not sure if the subjects are figures from the present or the past.