Ahn-Nyung | Hello
Transcription
Ahn-Nyung | Hello
Ahn-Nyung | Hello An Introduction to Ko r e a n Co n t e m p o ra ry A rt Ahn-Nyung | Hello A n I n t r o d u c t i o n to Ko r e a n Co n t em p o r a ry A r t Ja n ua ry 2 2 to F eb r ua ry 1 9, 20 1 1 C u r at e d by Ja e Ya n g | A r t- m e r g e L e Ba s s e P r o j ec t s 6 0 2 3 Wa s h i n g to n B o u l e va r d C u lv e r Ci t y, Califo r n ia 9 0 2 3 2 Jae Yang | Art-merge Jae Yang is the founder of Art-merge, a Los Angeles-based art consulting firm that supports emerging artists through representation, marketing, career development and exhibition opportunities. Through Art-merge, she seeks to spark synergy between artists and collectors through cultural collaboration, education, enrichment and support. Jae Yang is a first-generation Korean American and a graduate of The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art. Defining the Korean Experience. It is common practice to examine and explore ancient Ahn-Nyung | Hello is an attempt to address the latter. societies primarily through the cultural artifacts they An exhibition of 15 multimedia works by four Korean produce. It is far less common, however, to understand artists, Ahn-Nyung | Hello mines the vanguard of South a contemporary society through its cultural output, Korea’s dynamic gallery scene to deliver the American where social movements, market economies and polit- audience an unprecedented survey of works—one that ical machinations more often than not dominate news uncovers a culture in transition in which history and headlines and the public consciousness. memories are mutable, synthesis abuts tradition, and experience is subject to a regimen of creative re-envi- Present day South Korea marks such a gulf of under- sioning. While viewers may find aesthetic commonalities standing. Home to a rapidly expanding East Asian between the artists, that is not the primary intention of economy, the nation is more synonymous in the United this exhibition. Instead, four artists have been assembled States of America with its mobile phones, home elec- who grapple directly with Korean experience and iden- tronics and automobiles, than with its burgeoning stable tity, and in the process unearth precious moments in of contemporary artists. Yet as Seoul fast becomes the which private and public dialogue overlap in a tangible, world’s most wired city—a pulsing, networked metropo- personal, and often paradoxical way. lis of knowledge-based workers spurring along with it the hyper-post-industrialization of the entire country— Ahn-Nyung | Hello is the result of a series of trips taken so too does South Korea exhibit vibrant tenets of growth: throughout 2010: to New York for the Korean Art Show, namely, an explosion of art and cultural producers. And a small satellite fair timed to take place concurrently as Asian markets rapidly open and expand, so too does during the Armory Arts Week; to China for the Shang- contemporary Korean art grow ever more realized, hai Art Fair; and lastly, to the Korean International Art inventive…and vital. Fair (KIAF), in Seoul, where the gallery scene has been a constant source of intrigue, influence and energy. This confluence of contemporary work has not gone completely unnoticed in the West. A handful of note- I would like to thank Christine and Beau Basse, who worthy exhibitions has already heralded the arrival graciously lent their Culver City gallery for Ahn-Nyung of Korean contemporary art on the global stage, both | Hello, an exhibition I hope will serve as a watershed large—LACMA’s 2009 “Your Bright Future: 12 Contempo- moment in the exchange of work back and forth between rary Artists from Korea” and Saatchi Gallery’s 2009 and Seoul and Los Angeles. I would also like to thank the 2010 “Korean Eye” exhibitions—and small—One and J. people who have offered ideas and support along the Gallery’s exhibition of Korean and Japanese contempo- way: Brent Turner, The Campbells PR; Dohyung Kwon, rary art at the Pierre Koenig Case Study House in the Kwanhoon Projects; Jung Yong Lee, Gana Art; and Hollywood Hills of Los Angeles. These exhibitions signal especially Robert Ross who encouraged me to pursue a point of transcendence for the working Korean artist— Art-merge. Finally, I hope that you will find Ahn-Nyung | from outsider to contemporary, or colleague—and yet Hello to be an inspiring introduction to Korean contem- the question still arises: what criteria define Korean art porary art, a waypoint in the increasingly globalized today? To which the only logical answer seems to be world of contemporary art. yet another question: what criteria define the Korean experience today? Ja e Ya n g Lo s A n g e l e s , Ja n ua ry 2 0 1 1 Jin Young Yu Working with a cast of semi-invisible sculpted characters, Jin Young Yu explores the disparity between the outward and inward self. While her work has drawn on an ever-evolving storyline—from the meek-faced outcast wishing to be invisible to others, to the family overtly flamboyant in its attempt to appear “normal” as it entertains guests, to the hidden scars we all carry with and within us—Yu’s conceptual impetus is consistently clear: to acknowledge the anxiety of social situations, and to expose the implicit acts of cover-up one engages in as he or she adheres to social convention. Yu’s work centers on the use of two opposing media, and the tropes their usage represents: the disguise—faces and clothing rendered in vibrantly painted plaster; and a yearning for invisibility—bodies molded of ultra-transparent PVC, a material Yu prefers for its weightless, distortion-free quality. In the past, Yu has exhibited her work in low light, utilizing site-specific obstructions such as columns or pedestals to half-hide her characters. Jin Young Yu received her MFA and BFA from Sungshin Women’s University, Seoul. She has exhibited in Seoul, Osaka and London. She lives and works in Gyeonggi-do, Korea. Biography Jin Young Yu | b. 1977 EDUCATION 2005 MFA in Sculpture, Sungshin Women’s University, Seoul 2001 BFA in Sculpture, Sungshin Women’s University, Seoul SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2008 A Family in Disguise, Union Gallery, London, United Kingdom 2007 Welcome, Kimi Art Gallery, Seoul Abundant Emptiness, Ami & Kanoko Gallery, Osaka, Japan 2006 Abundant Emptiness, Chang Gallery, Seoul 2004 Leaf, Life, Noam Gallery, Seoul GROUP EXHIBITIONS 2008 The Battle of Taste, Sangsangmadang, Seoul 2007 2007 I Design, Kumho Museum, Seoul Funny (Baton Touch), Art Space Hyun, Seoul A Complex, Sungkok Museum, Seoul 2006 Wall – A Story Behind That, Gallery Zandari, Seoul Museum Festival, Seoul Museum of Art, Seoul Whey Protein, Kimi Art Gallery, Seoul 2005 Seoul Art Fair, Seoul Arts Center, Seoul Funny Funny 4, Gallery Sejul, Seoul 2004 Objet Painting, Gallery Chosun, Seoul 21C Shamanism, Gallery Choheung, Seoul Rapture Party, The Alternative Space Hap, Club COD, Seoul A Family in Disguise, 2008, pvc/mixed media, 51" x 10" x 12"; The Disguised, 2010, pvc/mixed media, 51" x 14" x 14" (human), 14" x 13" x 7" (dog) Seok Kim The robot—object of childhood affection, of desire and memory, and of Asian pop-cultural vernacular— assumes a transcendent role in Seok Kim’s sculptural work. The son of toy store owners, Kim had enviable access to these iconic objects as a child, and in particular, he enjoyed uncommon access to highly soughtafter plastic model robot kits. Years later as a fine artist, Kim’s wistful intimacy with the robot as sculptural piece is still evident; he poses his subjects in uniquely human stances—canonical forms of contemplation, isolation and prayer. Longing, memory and expectation, both collective and personal, are critical to the work. The boundaries of identity and status blur as Kim’s high-performance humanoids seek recognition, or at least normalcy, in a society that recognizes them as inherently subservient. By sculpting his subjects out of materials like anachronistic pine wood or monochromatic plastic, Kim establishes a set of incongruences through which he can explore desire, sentiency, and the implications and expectations of progress on both the individual and society at large. A graduate from Kyungnam University, Kim has exhibited in France and throughout Korea and currently lives and works in Gyeonggi-do, Korea. Biography Seok Kim | b. 1976 EDUCATION 2004BFA in Sculpture Fine Art, Kyungnam University SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2009 “ROBOT STORY” Third Story, Samteo Gallery, Seoul 2007 “ROBOT STORY” Remembrance of Masterpiece, COEX Gallery Aqua, Seoul 2008 “ROBOT STORY AND II,” Gallery Siuter, Seoul 2003 Kim Seok Sculpture Exhibition, Kyungnam University Design Gallery, Masan, Korea GROUP EXHIBITIONS 2009 Eighteen Masterpieces, Art company H, Seoul.and Jeju-Do Art for Children, Colon Summer Museum, Gwacheon FUN of Exhibition, K & Gallery, Seoul Gallery is Alive, SUHO Gallery, Gaacheon Aesthetic of Material, 4 Walls Gallery, Seoul Major of Art Contents, Sahmyook University, Seoul Phanpharonsage, Beautifullife Gallery, Vitar Art Business Center, France Korean Cartoon 100th Anniversary Exhibition, National Museum of Contemporary Art, Gwacheon Project of Art Life, Uijeongbu Arts Center, Uijeongbu Hero Return, Light Gallery, Seoul Garden of Sculpture, Seongnam Art Center, Sungnam Seoul Living Design Fair, Coex Center, Seoul Thank You, JS ART Gallery, Paju TICTAC TICTAC, Gallery Godo, Seoul Smile Smile Smile, Gallery Godo, Seoul 2008 Korean Paintings, Ssamzie Art Market, Seoul Robot Art Museum, Bucheon Robot Park, Bucheon Leg Godt, Gyeonggi University Museum, Suwon Arts Meet the Sea, National Museum of Contemporary Art, Kyungju Arts Meet the Sea, National Museum of Contemporary Art, Daejun Wonderful Life, Dusan Art Center, Seoul Art Robot Museum, Masan 3.15 Art Center, Masan Exciting Museum Exhibition, Gyeongsangnam-do Museum, Changwon Artist’s Garden, Clayarch Museum, Kimhae Cross Culture, Hangaram Museum Seoul Art Center, Seoul Art Star 100 Exhibition, Open Gallery, Seoul CONVERSE 100th Anniversary Exhibition, Hongik University Street Art, Seoul Garden Sculptures, Civic center Seongnam, Seongnam Say About Laughs, Gwacheon Jebiwool Museum, Gwacheon Masquerade, One Gallery, Seoul 2007 Christmas Craziness, KT Art Hall Studio, Seoul Kim Seok Robot Story, Hyundai Department Store Topaz Garden, Seoul 2006 Tree’s Space, Magam News, Seoul 2005Gaya Global Culture Fair, Kim Hae Culture Center, Kim Hae Flower’s Village Nature Art, Flower’s Village of Busan, Busan 2004Asia Young Artist Festival, Seongsan Art Hall, Changwon Korean Award, National Museum of Contemporary Art, Gwacheon 2003 Seongsan Arts Award, Seongsan Art Center, Changwon Lonely Night, 2010, wood/acrylic paint, 41" x 47" x 46"; Way Home, 2011, wood/acrylic paint, 35" x 18" x 34"; Are You Happy?, 2011, wood/acrylic paint, 31" x 24" x 26"; Praying Gundam, 2009, plastic, 16" x 20" x 8"; Believe Tae Kwon V, 2009, plastic, 8" x 8" x 13" Yeonju Sung In her photographs of clothing constructed from materials that could never realistically be worn, Yeonju Sung captures what she describes as a series of phantoms—temporal checkpoints depicting objects destined to decay, objects that fail in function what they seem to fulfill in appearance. Sung begins by designing clothing out of foodstuffs such as eggplant, lotus root, chewing gum and chicken. She then photographs these articles of culinary couture, effectively removing context from purpose and concealing the degradation effects of time. Sung recognizes the inability of her organic pieces to carry out the function which they signify—and she likewise exposes the limits of the photographic image as it conveys a fleeting reality, a moment of meaning that will never exist beyond the printed page. Ultimately, Sung’s exhibited works are the printed photographs, not her sculptured constructions. By flattening and freezing her sculptural work through the photographic act, Sung exposes the authority of image over reality, revealing a tenuous line that separates lived from imagined experience. A graduate of Hongik University, Seoul, Yeonju Sung lives, works and exhibits in Seoul. Biography Yeonju Sung | b. 1986 EDUCATION 2010BFA from Department of Painting, College of Arts, Hongik University, Seoul SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2009 Wearable Foods, Gallery Young, Seoul The Image between Reality and Non-Reality, Mok-Ho Cultural Center, Ulsan GROUP EXHIBITIONS 2010Gallery Kak, Seoul Gallery Ku, Kon Kuk University Medical Center, Seoul Asia Top Hotel Art Fair, The Shilla Hotel Seoul Korea International Art Fair, Coex, Seoul Art Edition, Bexco, Busan, Korea Safi, Seoul 2009 Young Artists “Hot Issue,” Gaia Gallery, Seoul On Off Show, Lamer Gallery, Seoul Nobody Ask, Mok-Ho Cultural Center, Ulsan Playground in August, Gallery Young, Seoul Banana, 2010, pigment print, 42" x 34"; Eggplant, 2010, pigment print, 42" x 34"; Spring Onion, 2009, pigment print, 42" x 34"; Lotus Root, 2009, pigment print, 42" x 34" Hyung Kwan Kim In the work of Hyung Kwan Kim, artificial narratives are born out against dense, hyper fields of activity—frenetic, populous scenes that underscore the labor-intensive process the artist undergoes to create such work. Since 2005, Kim has been meticulously collecting, cutting and assembling boxsealing tape (known commercially as OPP tapes) into complex compositions, or “tape paintings” as they are called in Korea. These tape paintings are a surreal response to a contemporary Korean society, in which Kim fears anything and everything can be erased and re-packaged to appeal to the modern sensibility. His subjects appear dismembered and obscured, architectural history gives way to trend-driven temporality, and industrialized excess reaches a point of absurdity in the work. Utilizing a palette limited only by commercial availability, Kim is able to extract rich nuances from the subtle variances in hue and saturation between these inconsistently manufactured tapes. Hyung Kwan Kim received his BFA from Daegu University of the Arts and his MFA from the Hansung University School of Art. He has exhibited throughout Korea and currently lives and works in Seoul. Biography Hyung Kwan Kim | b. 1974 EDUCATION 2000 BFA in Painting, Daegu University of the Arts 2003 MFA in Painting, Hansung University School of Art SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2008 TRANS, Gallery DOS, Seoul 2007 Before Sunset, Art Space Sadari, Seoul 2003 Like I am on Roller Coaster, A&D Gallery, Seoul GROUP EXHIBITIONS 2010 Tippint Poin, Kwanhoon Gallery, Seoul KIAF, coex, Seoul Autonomy Zone 1-130, Arts Council Korea, Seoul Kill Heal, Speedom Gallery, Gyeonggido Day of Confidence, Art Space ‘ccul’, Seoul New kims! new link!, VIT Gallery, Seoul 2009 Moving Target, Shinsegae Art Galley, Gyeonggido Evanescent Landscape, Tonguidong BOAN Yeokwan, Seoul Joongang Fine Arts Prize Exhibition, Hangaram Art Museum, Seoul Songeun Arts Prize Exhibition, insa arts space, Seoul Art and Fashion, Oulim Art Gallery, Gyeonggido 2008 Making Words Short, Art Space Sadari, Seoul Choongye Art Awards Exhibition, Koreana Art Museum, Seoul Art Market, Cafe VW, Seoul 2006 Wandering, 5tong 7ban, Seoul 2003 Intersection, Gallery Deep, Seoul 2002 Chemical Art, Sagan Gallery, Seoul Makgulli Is in the Refrigerator, Samsun Market project exhibition, Seoul Jjok Ji,Gwanhoon Gallery, Seoul 2001 Dislocation, Space 129, Daegu Art and Villiage, Wongol, Gongju Moohangwangmyung Saesakaltong gangchu, Jungdok Library, Seoul New New Generation, Gallery Shilla, Daegu 2000 Factory Exhibition Blinded Love, Changdong Samepyo Factory, Seoul More Than This #3, 2009, colored plastic tapes on paper, 46" x 71"; Untitled, 2010, colored plastic tapes on paper, 48" x 33" Ahn-Nyung | Hello An introduction to Ko re an Co ntem p o rary Art Ja n ua ry 2 2 to F eb r ua ry 1 9, 2 0 1 1 C u r at e d by Ja e Ya n g | A r t- m e r g e Ja e Ya n g L e Ba s s e P r o j ec t s A r t- m e r g e 6 0 2 3 Wa s h i n g to n B o u l e va r d ja e@a r t- m e r g e . c o m C u lv e r Ci t y, Califo r n ia 9 0 2 3 2 www. a r t- m e r g e . c o m www. l e b a s s e p r o j ec t s . c o m C o p y r i g h t © 2 0 1 1 A r t- m e r g e | L e Ba s s e PRO J ECTS