Four voices, one myth, and a comeback built to fracture the idea of what a comeback is supposed to look like.
Silence proceeds a ARTMS comeback. Not the anxious hush of a countdown clock, but something closer to reverence — the sense that whatever drops next won’t just be a song, it’ll be a puzzle piece in a mythology that’s been building since 2024. That silence broke on June 25, when the group released a teaser film titled “Am I who you think I am?”, a single line that reads less like a hook and more like a thesis statement.
Now the answer is arriving. Hyper-Ego, ARTMS’s second mini album, lands August 7 at 1 p.m. KST via MODHAUS — and the concept photos rolling out ahead of it, split across two visual dialects called Aura and Trauma, are already doing what this group does best: turning a comeback rollout into a slow-burn cinematic reveal.

From Ashes to Artemis
To understand why an ARTMS era feels like an event rather than a release, you have to go back to the wreckage it was built from. HeeJin, HaSeul, Kim Lip, JinSoul, and Choerry spent years as members of LOONA, one of the most structurally ambitious girl groups of the 2010s, before a bruising 2022 legal dispute with their agency splintered the group entirely.
Four of the five won their case outright. What they did next is the part fans still talk about: they didn’t wait around for someone else to hand t hem a second act. They wrote their own.In 2023 they signed with MODHAUS, a label built by their former creative director, and by May 2024 they’d debuted as ARTMS — a name pulled from Artemis, the Greek goddess of the moon, layered with a nod to NASA’s own Artemis lunar program.
The symbolism wasn’t decorative. It was a mission statement: we are going back to where we started, and then somewhere further.
The Icarus Turn
If Dall, their 2024 debut, introduced ARTMS as a group obsessed with love that exists beyond the screen, 2025’s Club Icarus era is where the group fully weaponized its own scale.

The title track arrived as a nearly fifteen-minute two-part film, splitting into a stark black-and-white “club version” and a sprawling “cinematic version” that folded the group’s entire visual mythology — wings, cult imagery, digital doubles, a menacing maternal figure — into one continuous fever dream.

It was, by any conventional K-pop metric, an insane amount of ambition to put behind a comeback. It also worked. Club Icarus reframed the Icarus myth not as a cautionary tale about flying too close to the sun, but as a story about what happens after the fall — the healing, the rebuild, the second flight.
For a group literally built from a shattered contract, that reframe landed as something closer to autobiography than concept.

Hyper-Ego: A Duel With the Self
The title alone tells you where this era is headed. Hyper-Ego suggests amplification — not vanity, but an inflated, almost destabilized sense of self, split cleanly down the middle by the two concept versions.
Aura reads luminous, composed, almost angelic in its restraint. Trauma, released just days later, pulls the opposite direction: rawer lighting, harder expressions, a visual register that feels less like a photoshoot and more like a confrontation.
Placed side by side, the two versions do something ARTMS concept photos have always done well — they refuse to resolve into a single, easily marketable image. You’re not meant to pick a favorite version so much as sit with the tension between them.
That’s the whole point of an ego that’s gone hyper: it’s too big to be one thing.
The Visual Language No One Else Is Speaking
Part of what makes ARTMS resonate so hard with a Gen Z audience fluent in irony, lore, and layered meaning is that the group refuses to spoon-feed any of it. Their videos, largely helmed by the genre-bending production team Digipedi, don’t build toward a tidy chorus payoff the way most title tracks do.
They build toward disorientation, then catharsis — a structure that rewards rewatching, theorizing, frame-by-frame breakdowns on fan Twitter, the kind of active engagement algorithms love and most pop rollouts never earn.
That’s the deeper story behind Hyper-Ego’s Aura Ver. concept photo landing as a “moment” rather than just promo content.

It’s not styled to be liked and scrolled past. It’s styled to be studied — a visual thesis statement dropped ahead of an album that’s already positioning itself as a psychological duel rather than a straightforward comeback.

Why OURII Shows Up Every Time
The fandom name OURII, drawn from the fifth letter of each member’s name and doubling as the Korean word for “us,” isn’t just clever branding — it’s a philosophy that ARTMS has built an entire community around.
This is a fanbase that followed its idols through a genuine legal war and came out the other side more loyal, not less. When HaSeul stepped back for surgery, OURII didn’t demand content.
They demanded she rest. When Hyper-Ego’s rollout leaned into a heavier, more fractured aesthetic, they didn’t ask for something easier to digest. They leaned in with it.
That’s the real throughline of the ARTMS story: an act that survived collapse and decided the only way forward was to make art about surviving collapse, gorgeously, unapologetically, and on their own terms — mutated egos, broken wings, and all.
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Credits & Rights
© 2026 Kpoppie Magazine, a publication of Velocity Entertainment Inc. Limited (Japan / New Zealand). All editorial content, layout, and original commentary are protected under the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works. All rights reserved.
Concept photography and album imagery referenced belong to MODHAUS and ARTMS. This feature is an independent editorial work; no affiliation with MODHAUS is implied.
Hero image AI-adjusted for aspect ratio and web formatting only. All original photography © MODHAUS / ARTMS
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