Monologue and Conversation

14 05 2012

A monologue is a dramatic device in which a character speaks to an audience under the assumption his counterpart cannot hear what he says. Just as we know his idea, although he talks to himself, artistic work should be objective despite subjective expression. Through the world I view, my subjective thought and interpretation, and indirect, diverse metaphorical expressions of the world, I arrange visual elements and attempt to communicate others, as if in a monologue in a drama.

 The landscapes made through a subtle concealment of images reflected from the unconscious, relate in an ambiguous boundary between reality and unreality. To this my monologues, over this incomplete space are expressed in diverse ways. Images and spaces naturally represented, like a custom we are familiar with for many years, present a recombination of unfamiliar space and time as if in surrealist automatism and depaysement (another technique,forming dreamy, unrealistic scenes by setting ordinary, familiar things in unfamiliar contexts,   generating a psychological shock in the viewers’ mind and liberating their unconscious). I seek a remarriage of unfamiliar space and time. This unfamiliarity is akin to the landscape of my reality, but I make more delicate, diverse attempts for change within it.

 I spend most of my time sticking to something within some restrictions and habitual regulations. More attention and observation is required for this obsession. I present the possibility to discover something more visible, and a special space to capture fleeting daily scenes.

Discovery and Excavation
I think a daily scene flowing in the same direction is the re-composition of various elements that look different every time in the same or different place. Everyone feels inconvenience and tension in an unfamiliar place, due to an awkward landscape or things. Over time however, one realizes they are almost the same, without complete difference. That is why their unfamiliarity has changed from something unfamiliar to something familiar.

Rene Magritte (1898-1967, Belgium) formed abnormal relationships between familiar things and reproduced objects, portraying them in diverse metaphorical, associative, and contradictory ways. He modified an object into another through erratic marriages with ordinary images, and created somewhat disquieting images by confronting things, to blur boundaries between reality and unreality through such images.

In some of his paintings, clouds merge in a room through an open door; a vase alters into a landscape in a window; a picture before a window is reproduced as part of the landscape outside the window. Likewise, Magritte intended to create something unfamiliar and disparate by adding his poetic ideas to familiar things, making efforts to exchange with others through the manifestation of his philosophical creativity in his paintings.

I attempt an expansion to another unfamiliar space in ever-changing daily life. I insert an image I discovered in a familiar place in another space, randomly, and endeavor an attempt to excavate another aspect buried between image and image, space and space, through new assumptions and suppositions. This is much like an attempt to create another world, (an unconscious world that cannot accurately or theoretically be elucidated, but is obviously existent), by drawing out another reality under the surface of reality, and by presenting another passageway in reality made up of similar landscapes.

This awkward scene seems like an unfamiliar bridge linking reality and unreality, but alters to a familiar appearance through a repetition of discovery and excavation. I wish this scene could be reinterpreted as another space where I can communicate with others.

The images, made through direct or indirect experience, appear through a process of deformation, repetition, combination, and abbreviation. These images return to their original appearance in a two-dimensional or three-dimensional space, or are modified into degraded unfamiliar appearances. The expansion and distortion of artificial thinking spreads to an unpredictable sphere, disregarding the distinction of space and things. The objects associated with one another, through unconscious assumptions and suppositions, represent an inner space, through coarse, simplified hieroglyphs, as clues to another world, likely to be somewhere between the conscious and unconscious.

Relations
Zhuangzi spoke his dream of a butterfly to his disciples: Once Zhuangzi dreamt he was a butterfly, a butterfly flitting and fluttering around, happy with himself. As he was so pleased, he forgot his existence. He didn’t know he was Zhuangzi. Suddenly, he woke up, and there he was. But he didn’t know if he was Zhuangzi, who had dreamt he was a butterfly, or a butterfly dreaming he was Zhuangzi. “Is this present I the real ‘I’, or am I the butterfly that became ‘I’ in my dream?” he said.

After hearing his remarks, a disciple said to him, “The story is too absurd, and is thus of no use in reality.” Zhuangzi explained again to his disciple about the distinction between usefulness and uselessness. He put it that, “The land that is useful for you is as large as the land you can stand on with your foot.

Collection Other areas of land beyond it are of no use. However, if you lose other areas of land, except for the land where you   stand, how long can you endure? The land truly necessary for you is the land on which you’re not standing, and this useless earth for you props up your existence.” In these narratives, Zhuangzi underlines the relationships between dream and reality, usefulness and uselessness. These Zhuangzi stories talk about whether I am the real ‘I’ in reality, or an ‘I’ existing in another world, confined to a frame of reality, emphasizing another space, propping up reality and the value of abstract space.

Henri Rousseau in his mature years portrayed exotic tropical landscapes through a primitive approach. Although he never visited such tropical areas, he delicately depicted unique landscapes at an intersection of reality and illusion, through what he heard from those who travelled there. Characterized by exotic plants, his paintings look like a repetition of abstraction and expression. Rousseau created unique landscapes through a combination of his memories and information from others, which he himself had never experienced. By using such information, collected from an external world, he gained a momentum, to move beyond the limitation of his expression.

I also endeavor to execute diverse expressions, gathering information from external, indirect experience. A number of images I collected in the same canvas are organically combined and enlarged. These images linked through contours are delicately depicted like Rousseau’s work, and thus look abstract. A repetitive movement of lines with the sense of speed and force divides space, creating equilibrium and order as a whole.
In Oriental painting, the use of lines signifies the completeness of personality as well as dexterity. The lines rendered without modification depict the core of things, often evoking vitality and tension. A conceived structure should be thus in mind before drawing lines in Oriental painting. The images rendered through articulate lines are deformed and deconstructed for an entire structure. The colors occupying some part of the canvas are used to distinguish space and things, and to underline a specific area.

It has become one of my long-held habits, collecting and arranging the traces of my memories, then recomposing and keeping them in a specific place. This habit, derived from an unconscious impulse, forms a new space naturally and presents a new possibility, disregarding the limit of reality. An example of this interpretation is found in the following:
“A habit is a pattern repetitively unveiling an individual’s inner state. Accordingly, a habit is one’s mental attitude practiced into a behavior. Our habit refers to a way with which we exist and assemble life fragments. This is also a symbol signifying who we are. Francis Bacon thus concluded that a habit is a daughter of our behavior.” (Eric Booth, Everyday Work of Art, translated by Gang Joo-heon, p.163)
I strive to find new meaning from many memories discarded in everyday life. Through this process, I am able to focus more on myself and gain momentum to observe the verge of time we pass over without noticing it.

Compromises
Standing before an enormous wall, I look at it. The wall is filled with countless doors. A dim light exudes out of a door, while a disgusting noise from another door stimulates me. I imagine depth among such doors. I choose one door, wondering which space and time this door links to, and which unexpected incident it hides. If the door distinguishing a real world and an unconscious world opens, the world behind it approaches me to compromise the world I live in now. I thus assume the role of a passageway in the middle of these two worlds.

I offer these worlds, derived from the unconscious, a position and role to find something in common and become more like each other. Spending most of my time in an isolated space encircled by walls in all directions, I imagine landscapes outside this space and draw them into my space.

An encounter of two completely different spaces might be unnatural, but they become a new landscape, unexpectedly according with each other. Some parts akin to each other are connected and modified to insert one space into another. Its resultant landscape exists like an isolated islet. To be isolated means being separate from one’s surroundings, but in a sense, it also means maintaining an innocent, not deteriorated state. I wish the environment I create should remain pure and spontaneous.

If an empty space is filled with the visualized traces of memories, unintentional modification arises. Just as harmony is created by performers in an orchestra, playing instruments with different characteristics, each object exists for the whole. My work, spread from a standard image to the whole, has a result that is not expected. If one image is chosen, other images are continuously set to this. By putting them together, one by one, like a puzzle, an entire image appears naturally. It resembles an everyday scene I make. By putting together pieces of life, one by one, someday an entire appearance appears gradually.

I am making a journey to find proper puzzles, following the traces of my memories. The destination of this journey is in reality, but it remains ambiguous. What’s above all else significant and invaluable is the process to reach the final destination.





Chinwook Kim

7 05 2012

‘Externalisations of the Mind’
Mon 14 – Sun 27 May 2012

Oriental VisArt is pleased to present Korean artist Chinwook Kim’s first solo exhibition in Switzerland, and Oriental VisArt’s 7th exhibition.

At first glance Chinwook Kim’s works appear as semi-abstract landscapes filled with life and nature. Works that are soft in palette and intricate with organic forms, reminiscent of detailed Japanese woodblock prints in which the figures inhabit a narrow foreground space and are defined only by simple ink outlines filled with flat areas of colour or textile patterns.

However there is a sense of uneasiness and eeriness to the twisting forms that impose on each other, layer after layer, which reveal a far more complex and sober nature of what lies beneath and behind the tightly bound, gnarled forms. Only rarely is shading employed, and then it is confined to depictions of blurring the distinction between the detail and what appears to be black holes, spaces void of information or recall.

Kim is an accomplished draughtsman; the works are drawn with dense hatching to create tonality, yet some of the most beautiful works in the series have black spots or areas that are drowned in shading, creating a haze where detail struggles to emerge. These works tell us about the mind of the artist; the surfaces are so dense with detail that the images feel airtight and dense. Spidery calligraphic lines create organic shapes that feel as through they are in perpetual motion, while washes, drips and glimpses of colour suggest second thoughts and erasures. Over a piece of white paper his horde of creeping forms are influenced by the mastery of medium and imagination of Heironymous Bosch, or the consummate delicacy and refinement of Aubrey Beardsley.

Chinwook Kim’s works unfold as his conscious and subconscious state of mind does. His works are the externalisations of his mind.

Born in 1972 in Korea, Chimwook Kim undertook his undergraduate Bachelor of Fine Arts in Seoul, before relocating to Europe and completing a second Bachelor of Fine Arts followed by his Masters in Germany, then after relocating to the UK he completed a further Masters of Fine Arts. His works have featured in numerous group exhibitions in the UK and Switzerland.





London Vernissage Jan 2012

7 02 2012

Wook Heo‘s first exhibition in London is proving to be a success, and here are a few photos of the artist’s work presented at Mokspace, during the private viewing on 27 Jan 2012.
The artist’s love of Matisse is apparent in his vibrant palette and these photos highlight the three dimensional quality of Wook’s art. Enjoy the burst of colours in these photos!









« Neon Plants, Night Lights and Travel to the Galaxy » opening reception

30 05 2011

Oriental VisArt proudly presented our current exhibition, « Neon Plants, Night Lights and Travel to the Galaxy », on 24 May 2011 at Nest Gallery in Geneva, Switzerland. This is the first solo exhibition of Korean Artist Hyungji Park in Switzerland.

Hyungji Park was in attendance for this vernissage. Guests were treated to her works on a beautiful, summery Geneva evening. All the guests had the opportunity to speak with Park, asking all sorts of questions and getting to know this talented Artist personally. « Neon Plants, Night Lights and Travel to the Galaxy » continues until Sun 5 June 2011. Thank you to all who came to the vernissage, and if you haven’t had the opportunity to stop by already, we look forward to seeing you soon!

Please enjoy some images from the vernissage.

Display view 1

Display

Display view 2

Display

Display view 3

Display

Vernissage view 1

Vernissage

Vernissage

Vernissage

Vernissage

Vernissage

Vernissage

Vernissage

Vernissage

Vernissage

Artist Hyungji Park and organiser Kayla Hye K. Yang

Artist Hyungji Park and organiser Kayla Hye K. Yang





Oriental-VisArt.ch’s Exhibition Page

21 05 2011

Oriental VisArt’s upcoming show, « Neon Plants, Night Lights and Travel to the Galaxy » begins this week on 23 May 2011.

For more information on this exhibition, you can check out our newly-added exhibitions page. This page hosts information about the exhibition, the Artists, and more. Here you can find details about upcoming shows as well as information on our past exhibitions.

Again, we look forward to seeing you on 24 May 2011 for the vernissage for our 5th exhibition featuring Hyungji Park.





Oriental VisArt’s 5th Exhibition – Neon Plants, Night Lights and Travel to the Galaxy, Hyungji Park’s solo show

19 05 2011

Oriental VisArt is pleased to announce our fifth exhibition, Neon Plants,
Night Lights and Travel to the Galaxy,
a solo exhibition featuring the works of Korean Artist Hyungji Park. The exhibition will commence on 23 May 2011 at Nest Gallery in Old Town, Geneva, Switzerland, and run for two weeks. The vernissage will take place 24 May 2011 from 6-9 p.m. at Nest Gallery and Artist Hyungji Park will be in attendance.


« Neon Plants, Night Lights and Travel to the Galaxy » features the work of Korean Artist Hyungji Kim for her first solo exhibition in Switzerland.

Splashed, splattered, sprayed, spread, swept. Blotted, dripped, layered, mixed, pared back, rubbed. For Hyungji Park the physicality of paint is as important as it is a visual medium. The artist’s interpretation of her chosen subject matter through the manipulation and application of paint is paramount.

Park takes her imagery from everyday life – drawing visual references from contemporary culture and media, the internet, art history, magazines, advertisements, and conventional motifs found in comics, graphic design and old wood cut prints. Each source is then re-appropriated through painting techniques to transform the original source into a new realisation – one that is rich in fantasy and has multiple interpretations. The artist claims to be in constant search for ways to create new and playful dialogues between the material conventions of painting and the abundance of imagery she finds around her.

In « Neon Plants, Night Lights and Travel to the Galaxy » the artist shows recent works and those from her previous series Strange  Scenery. Park creates fictitious scenes by combining collected visual references that are then dissected and recreated to form new abstracted landscapes and imagery. In her earlier works, the artist details sections with acute precision, carefully building up layers of oil paint, and then dripping watery thin consistency of medium sporadically over the works so that ultimately the result is that the viewer’s eye is drawn away from the apparent subject matter to the surface of the work and hence the structure of the painting.

More recent works are influenced by visual references taken from window displays, illuminations, objects and design. The works show evidence of a more broad experimentation with technique – paring back surfaces and detail, scraping off paint or spraying and splattering medium in order to conjure effect and experience. Park’s paintings could be said to be revelations of her mind’s processing of modern society’s visual overload of information, and her technique – her way of digesting, sorting, reflecting upon and understanding. The artworks become the connecting tissue for the thoughts and views of the artist.

Park appears interested less in the finished work than in the ‘systems’. Her works are not so much the culmination of a concept, as the product of what is unseen – her thoughts and her actions. This series denotes her advance in her practice, and her desire to have a complete experience with painting – one that involves seeing, thinking and doing.

Park earned a Bachelor of Fine ArtsArts Degrees Hongik University of Seoul, Korea in 2001, followed by her Masters in 2006 at the Korean National University of Arts in Seoul. She went on to complete an additional Masters of Fine Art at the Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design in London in 2008. Park currently lives and works in London.

Sascha Gianella
May, 2011

Please enjoy Hyungji Park’s work images!

Bubble Castle, Acrylic on linen, 95x130cm, 2011

Bubble Castle, Acrylic on linen, 95x130cm, 2011

Boramae Park, Acrylic on linen, 130x145cm, 2011

Boramae Park, Acrylic on linen, 130x145cm, 2011

Neon Plants, Acrylic on linen, 130x145cm, 2011

Neon Plants, Acrylic on linen, 130x145cm, 2011





Displaced Realities – Opening Reception

10 04 2011

Oriental VisArt‘s fourth exhibition Displaced Realities opened with a vernissage on 6 April 2011 at 6 p.m. at Carry On Art Contemporian in Plainpalais, Geneva, Switzerland. Again, we were very lucky for the weather; it was a beautiful day and beautiful evening. Guests enjoyed the works by Ayoung Kim (Korea), James Chen-Feng Kao (Taiwan/USA) and Hongjie Ma (China) in the 350 square metre gallery. Oriental VisArt is displaying 17 photographs and 6 drawings in this incredible space. The exhibition will run until 19 April every day at Carry On in Plainpalais, Geneva, Switzerland. We look forward to seeing you there on these sunny Swiss days!

Please enjoy images from the opening reception.

Carry On Art Contemporian

Carry On Art Contemporian

Display view

Display view

Display view (Ayoung Kim)

Display view (Ayoung Kim)

Display view (Hongjie Ma)

Display view (Hongjie Ma)

Display view (James C Kao)

Display view (James C. Kao)

Guests

Guests

Guests

Guests

Guests

Guest

Guests

Guests

Guest and Kayla Hye K. Yang

Guests

Guests

Guests





The Space Between – Opening Reception

9 03 2011

The Space Between, Oriental VisArt’s third exhibition, began 3 March 2011 with an opening reception / vernissage at 6 p.m. at La Cave in Geneva, Switzerland. We were extremely lucky with the spring-like weather, and guests from around the globe were treated to the works of three Asian artists: Wook Heo (Korea), Can Kang (China) and Kumaresan Selvaraj (India). This was the second exhibition in Geneva for Kumaresan (his works were shown at Threshold to every-day life in October 2010), and the debut in Switzerland for Wook and Cang. Their works were received with curiosity and interest; engaging each guest with a sense of wonder about each Artist’s individual perspective of identity in this fast-developing world. The exhibition will continue everyday at  La Cave until 13 March.

Please enjoy images from our opening reception.

Main entrance of La Cave in Old Town, Geneva

 

Display view 1

 

Display view 2

 

Display view 3

 

Display view 4

 

Display view 5

 

Guests in the Room 2

 

Guests in the Room 1/ ‘Between tiers- cars 282′ by Wook Heo

 

Can Kang’s work ‘Ice age crazy’

 

Wook Heo’s work ‘Between tiers- books 112′

 

Wook Heo’s work ‘Between tiers- football 67′

 

Can Kang’s Works ‘Come back to T’ang in my dream (above)/ ‘Horse doesn’t move (below)

 

Guests

 

Guests and the OVA team

 

Guests

 

Garden of La Cave

 

Reception

 

Guests

 

Guests

 

Young guests

 

Organiser Kayla Hye K. Yang/’What we see conceals a lot behind it’ by Kumaresan Selvaraj

 

Photographed by Iryna Manzhosova

 





Art scenes in Beijing

22 04 2010

I (Kayla) and the General Manager (Janis) went to Beijing 5 – 10 April. What we first said was ‘Wow’ when we arrived at the airport. Things are huge and people are so energetic. It was definitely too short to see even Art scenes there. Today I’m going to briefly talk about 798 Art District, Chaochangdi Village and Sonzhuang Village.

798 Art District is the most famous Art Zone in Beijing. There are the zone A, B, C, D and E and we spent so much time on finding some places as the information on the maps was often wrong. We got to know the reason why. Some galleries move into a new place quite often so that some maps cannot be corrected every time.

We visited many galleries for two days and where we most liked were New Age Gallery, Photo Gallery, Pifo Gallery, Gallery TN, 3181 Cool Gallery, Star Gallery and Yan Club Arts Centre. Some Galleries present well-known Artists but many are concentrating on new generation. It was good to catch local trends and see some new works from new Artists. We had an opportunity to visit Gao Brother’s studio with Ms. Melanie Ouyang Lum who is the owner of ML Art Source in Beijing. She helped us a lot to find some places and gave us great advice of Chinese Contemporary Arts. She is enthusiastic to promote Chinese Contemporary Arts and that encouraged us a lot as well.

Chaochangdi Village is located near 798 Art District but the Galleries have bigger size space so that we could see more installations and video arts there. Established galleries and foreign Galleries are located there so that Artists are also more established compared to 798 Art District. We enjoyed the group show at the Platform China. One thing that was very inconvenient was that there are no maps or directions in the village. Without a local person you would spend much time on finding a place as it is a huge area.

Songzhuang Village has about 3,000 artists’ studios and about 100 foreign Artists work from there. We visited only about 10 studios due to our time limit. This place seems to be mixed with different standards of Artists and different age groups. Many places were under construction and the same brick houses were impressive. I would like to visit during the Songzhuang Art Festival in Sept 2010.

Overall, time was too short- as you can imagine how Beijing is big!! It was more to explore Chinese Contemporary Arts and meet local Artists so I think that we could do everything much easier next time.

Entrance of 798 Art District

798 Art District

From Chaochangdi (Platform Gallery)

Group show ‘Jungle’ at Platform Gallery

Installation by famed Architect ‘Ma Yansong’ and Danish-Icelandic Artist ‘Olafur Eliasson’: UCCA





A solo show by Eun Jung Park, ‘A Life from the Beginning’.

10 01 2010

We are glad that Ms Eun Jung Park has had her solo exhibition in the States. People in NYC must be impressed by her own way of depicting the stories. Medium used and her techniques are unique and her works are great as a piece that is a part of a whole or as a whole. Depends on the distance to look them and different distances give audiences different aspects of the images.

04 Jan - 29 Jan 2010

At Hutchins Gallery, NYC

A critic Jonathan Goodman siad as below;

” Eun Jung Park has only been in America for a few months, but clearly she understands the nature of the challenges that face her. Both her degrees, the B.F.A. and M.F.A, come from Hongik University, where she picked up her realist painting skills. Ambitious in nature, Park has come to New York to participate in the mainstream art world, rather than socialize and work only among Korean artists, as so often happens here. Her art takes two forms: a series of abstract canvases, which demonstrate the influence of the New York School without succumbing to its now historical blandishments; and a series of works in which there are two components to the picture plane—the first is a transparent plastic rack, with shelves of small ampules filled with colored liquids, behind which is a realistic painting. The paintings are often difficult to see, being obscured by the small vials set up in front of them. In a way the “veil” in front of the painting serves several purposes: first, it demands that the viewer focus hard on seeing the image in the back; second, like much good contemporary art, the work stands in between the artistic categories—in this case between assemblage and painting; and third, the vials refer to a time when Park was sick—as a young girl, she spent time in Korean hospitals, receiving injections of medicine taken from the vials much like those she uses for her art.

This period of illness, of major psychic importance to the artist, is taken up and given metaphorical significance with the inclusion of the glass ampules. Brilliantly, Park uses the physical symbol to stand for actual experience, beautifully transforming a difficult part of the artist’s life into something visually arresting, as well as being healing in regard to Park’s earlier illnesses. Seen dimly through the rows of vials are Park’s expertly handled realist paintings, in some cases abstract while in others representational. The fact that the viewer must reach the painting by peering into the work and through the vials that can pretty thoroughly obscure it makes this work not only beautiful, but also symbolic of the way we see. Part is using a difficult piece of her experience to make works that transcend their past and establish a dialogue with her audience. In this way, she finds a positive outlook despite her years of physical weakness as a young women. So it happens that the work triumphs over personal adversity—doing so in terms that maintain the distance needed to make art effective”.

Oriental VisArt hopes the Artist Eun Jung Park will have great success of the exhibition and get a chance to be known to the people in the States.

Life Story(apple) 0918, mixed media, 165x165cm, 2008

 

Life Story(kiwi) 0912, mixed media, 41.0×31.8cm, 2008

 

Life Story(red apple) 0910, mixed media, 162.0×130.3cm, 2008








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