Chinese Artist Fen Weng

2 06 2011

Chinese Artist Fen Weng was born in Hainan, China, and is currently based out of two cities: Beijing and Haikou, China. She graduated from the Guangzhou Academy of Fine Arts, in Guangzhou, China. Her specialisation is photography.

Selected Solo Exhibitions
2009 Fataurbana-Weng Fen Centrum Kultury ZAMEK , Poznan, Poland
2008 Weng Fen-Beautiful New World JamJar Gallery, Dubai
Weng Fen-My Olympics Contemporary Art Society, Rome, Italy
2007 My Olympics Tang Contemporary Art, Beijing, China
Schone Aussichten: Weng Peijun’s Photo Kunsthalle Faust, Hannover, Germany
Weng Peijun’s Heaven Galeria Moriarty, Madrid, Spain
Return of the Silent Traveller Lowood Gallery, Armathwaite, UK
Selected Group Exhibitions
2009 Stairway to Heaven H&R Block Artspace At Kansas City Art Institute, Kansas, USA
Spectacle — To Each His Own Museum Of Contemporary Art, Taibei, Taiwan
2008 Mediation Biennale 08 Mediation Biennale Poznan, Poland
New World Order – Contemporary Installation Art and Photography from China Groninger Museum, Groningen, Holland
Stairway to Heaven Bates College Museum of Arts, Lewiston, US
Mahjong: Contemporary Chinese Art from the Sigg Collection Berkeley Art Museum andPacific Film Archive BAM/PFA, Berkeley. US
la cina e vicina PAN-palazzo delle arti di napoli, Naples, Italy
Food and Shelter Pekin Fine Arts, Beijing, China

Fen Weng describes her artistic philosophy:

Every morning I walk to work along the same boring road. Day after day I repeat the same actions. Sometimes I leave Haikou to go to Guangzhou, Beijing or some other place, but after I step out of the airport or railway station I feel as though I am still in Haikou. The buildings that line the streets seem to be the same kind of modern buildings, with the same mosaic tile or brick wall facing, the same architectural styles. Even the sky seems to be the same shade of blue.

Just that same morning I had still been sitting at home; now it is afternoon and I am already in Beijing or Shanghai. If I take a flight from China to America today, and spend 24 hours travelling, when I arrive in America it will still be today, departure and arrival seem to be the same time. These many similarities and repetitions make me think that reality must be false, that sensory perceptions are ambiguous.

Faced with this 2-dimensional kind of life, an utopian dreamland for the common people, I can only make subjective conjectures – it is like an empty, insubstantial body or ornament, and I have no way of freeing myself. It seems that it is because of reality that I am searching for this kind of fabricated sensation, reality – that you cannot possibly resist, that you cannot ever go back to.

Please enjoy some work images!

"Sitting on the Fence"

"Sitting on the Fence"

"Watching the Lake"

"Watching the Lake"

"Sitting on the Fence"

"Sitting on the Fence"

"Watching the Sea"

"Watching the Sea"





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





Oriental Visart’s fourth exhibition, “Displaced Realities”

28 03 2011

Oriental VisArt will be opening our fourth exhibition, Displaced Realities on 6 April 2011 at 6 p.m. with an opening reception / vernissage. The exhibition features three of OVA’s member Artists, Ayoung Kim (Korean), James Chen-Feng Kao (Taiwanese/American), and Hongjie Ma (Chinese). The exhibition will run until 19 April 2011 at Carry On Art Contemporain in Geneva. We look forward to seeing everyone there!

« Displaced Realities » features works by three Asian artists: Ayoung Kim (Korea), James Chen-Feng Kao (Taiwan/USA) and Hongjie Ma(China).

The Artists’ practices navigate contemporary dilemmas of human existence. They engage directly with the ascendancy of a mentality that has originated in the west and has today become typical of human civilisation; that of the radical secularisation of human life.  We live in a world that is obsessed with progress, which as a secondary manifestation is leaving individuals with a sense of dislocation and displacement within new and native environments.  Within this exhibition, the Artists reveal the effect and fragility of a status quo defined by change.

Ayoung Kim’s work Minima Memoria is a series of photographs concerned with headlines describing serious crimes, suicides, mysterious incidents and disasters.  The Artist attempts to bring new meaning to each tragedy by producing imagery taken in her own environments – her native Korea and her adopted UK – then through cutting and pasting Kim creates 3D models to reconstruct each scenario. The Artist uses to effect disproportionate scale, adding shadows to create angular perspectives and cutting out detail to deconstruct the meaning of the original images.  The meticulously crafted photomontage works provide sets for staging the artist herself, a character dislocated and displaced, finding echoes of her own experience in disasters that happened just around the corner, or to girls whose experience as students abroad mirrors her own (until the moment they disappeared)1.

Born in Seoul, Korea, in 1979, Ayoung Kim has completed a BA in Photography (Honours) from the London College of Communication (University of the Arts London) and a Masters of Arts in Fine Art at the Chelsea College of Art and Design.  She has exhibited in France, Germany, Hungary and notably at the Saatchi Gallery in London in 2009, and is the recipient of the 2009/2010 Young Art Frontier Grant from the Arts Council of Korea. 2010 was been a particularly successful year for the Artist winning The British Institution Award at the Royal Academy of the Arts and the Flash Forward – Emerging Photographers Award from the Canadian Magenta  Foundation.  She was also selected as a finalist in the Future Map Prize at the University of the Arts London and for Bloomberg New Contemporaries.  This year Kim will undertake a residency at the Künstlerhaus Bethanien in Berlin, supported by the Arts Council of Korea. Kim currently lives and works in London.

James Chen-Feng Kao is an emerging Taiwan-born American artist with an integrated practice in drawing, sculpture and installation.  Through his work he questions his own identity, of which is a blend of Asian and American cultures.  The Artist claims his work ‘lies in the moment of interaction between the viewers and the work’, when the viewer deciphers the images and concludes that what is seen is not what was expected.  In order to achieve this, Kao creates graphic characters using ink strokes inspired by Chinese calligraphy.  The characters are placed in large-scale format drawings, then abstracted and juxtaposed with photo-transferred elements to present narrative concepts.  The multiplicity of the characters and the lack of any one specific character reflect the Artist’s self-perceived notion of being a constant stranger, dislocated and displaced.

The Artist earned a Bachelor of Arts Degrees in Art Practice at the University of California, Berkeley, and in 2008 completed his Master of Arts.  Kao currently lives and works in New York.

Hongjie Ma presents selected works from his latest series of photographs, Family Stuff; a project started in 2005 in collaboration with fellow photographer Qinjung Huang, portraying ‘family dwellings turned inside out : furniture, accessories, animals and all, neatly presented – in the front yards. Ma aims to portray Chinese families from different ethnic backgrounds and regions in order to chronicle average Chinese living conditions today.  China is an immense country with diverse terrain and dramatically differing lives according to geographic location.  The Artist takes portraits that intentionally reveal how his subjects inhabit their environments and how these environments mould their lives.

Despite the geographical differences in each photograph, the works show a common simplicity and unpretentiousness of the average modern Chinese household, which is interestingly devoid of political paraphernalia that might have been amongst the possessions a few decades ago.  Thus, above all, the Artists want to show the profound transition that China is undergoing, which is particularly revealing in the everyday lives of normal families.  In the Confucian tradition family is considered as institution4, and family life in rural areas still represents identity rather than style, as opposed to homes in Chinese cities where existence and livelihood has been superseded by Western ways of life and materialism. The Artist is concerned with portraying China from its authentic side, chronicling the reality of the country’s rural majority.

The possessions photographed have become symbols of a people dislocated and displaced from their authentic reality, with ‘time’ being the protagonist.  Each photograph shows its effects and relativity: aged houses soon to be replaced by modern buildings which are already looming in the background, it presents its manifestations in TVs and refrigerators alongside traditional furniture and cooking utensils.

Hongjie Ma is a photo-journalist who has been documenting Chinese life for over 15 years.  His work has been published in national and international publications.  To date part of the Family Stuff series has been shown in Beijing in 2007 and Paris Photo 2011. The project is due for completion this year and a book will be published of the entire series.

Sascha Gianella
March, 2011

"Man Hits Bus Roof after 70Ft Death Plunge, 29 May, 2007", digital c-type print, 160 x 120 cm (Edition 3+2AP) / 100 x 76 cm (Edition 5+2AP), 2007~8

"Man Hits Bus Roof after 70Ft Death Plunge, 29 May, 2007", digital c-type print, 160 x 120 cm (Edition 3+2AP) / 100 x 76 cm (Edition 5+2AP), 2007~8 (Ayoung Kim)

'Untitled', James Chen-Feng Kao

'Everyone wants some Kung Fu fighting #2', (James Chen-Feng Kao)

Location: Qinghai Lake, 2006 (Hongjie Ma)

Location: Qinghai Lake, 2006 (Hongjie Ma)





Korean Artist Ayoung Kim

24 03 2011

Ayoung Kim was born in Seoul, Korea in 1979. Currently living in and working in London, Ayoung specialises in Photography and New Media. She received a B.A. in Visual Communication Design at Kookmin University in Seoul in 2002, as well as another B.A. (Honours) in Photography at London College of Communication. In 2010, she earned her M.A. in Fine Art at Chelsea College of Art and Design in London. Ayoung is about to begin a residency at Künstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin, Germany (Supported by Arts Council Korea). She will also be a part of Oriental VisArt’s upcoming group exhibition in Geneva in April. Her works have been shown all over the globe since 2006, and some of her most recent exhibitions include:

Solo Exhibitions
2010 Minima Memoria Street Level Gallery, Glasgow, UK
2009 A Delegation Window Gallery at Gallery Hyundai, Seoul, Korea
Ephemera I-Myu Projects, London, UK
Group Exhibitions
2010 Summer Exhibition 2010 Royal Academy of Arts, London, UK
Window Vol.2 (Upcoming)
Gallery Hyundai, Seoul, Korea
Hi, Mr. Lonely Gana Contemporary and Gana Art Busan, Seoul and Busan, Korea
4482 Contemporary Korean Artists in London Bargehouse, London, UK
Osannolik Digital Festival Kulturnatten, Växjö, Sweden
Ways of Seeing (Part II) I-Myu Projects, London, UK
2009 2009 Seoul International Photography Festival Garden 5, Seoul, Korea
Korea Tomorrow SETEC, Seoul, Korea
Salon09 Four Corners Film, London, UK
Aim High: Joong-Ang Fine Arts Prize Awarded Artists Show Hangaram Museum, Seoul Arts Center, Seoul, Korea
Korean Eye: Moon Generation Saatchi Gallery, London, UK
The Cinematic-Montage Seoul Museum of Art, Seoul, Korea
The Irony Kimi Art, Seoul, Korea

Ayoung Kim was featured in Minima Memoria,

Minima Memoria

Street Level Photoworks (2010) http://www.streetlevelphotoworks.org/

In Minima Memoria the artist has created a series of photographic and video works based around headlines in newspapers describing serious crimes, suicides, unusual incidents and disasters. From these headlines, she re-imagines and recreates the scenes as 3 dimensional photo-montages to bring a fresh and new perspective to the story. The artist has described the photographs as representing various fleeting and ephemeral events that happen in the world, being transformed into representations in news media.

‘(Kim) deconstructs and reconstructs a world of images to explore her own place within it… Her dizzying angular perspectives provide sets for staging herself, a character dislocated and displaced, finding echoes of her own experience in disasters that happened just around the corner, or to girls whose experience as students abroad mirrors her own (until the moment they disappeared). Meaning emerges from Kim’s fearless examination of the meaninglessness of these small catastrophes. She cannot unlock the mystery of Alexander Litvinenko’s death or an anonymous city suicide; the construction of each dense delirious image is an opportunity for the artist to project herself imaginatively into a scenario, to probe its poetic and metaphorical possibilities… Ayoung Kim restages the crime with the cool logic of the detective and the gruesome fascination of the voyeur. Her cutting and pasting takes place in three dimensional space, yielding impossible spaces for the eye to penetrate. In the process of montage some of the original meaning of the images is lost, and other meanings accrue.’

She says,

“‘It happens that the stage-sets collapse.’ – Camus, The Myth of Sisyphus (Camus, 1955)

These photographs represents various events happened recently in the world or the traces or ambiences of after-the-accidents. I transform them into the stage sets/models I created. Researching of each tragic story, I take pictures from my environment and the actual scene of accident/crime, then alter the images and move them into stage sets according to each context of event.

The reality effect from built-up photographs exists only through camera with proper angle and composition and eventually in the final image, as the stage sets are temporary construction. These can be 3-dimensional photo montages or just stage-sets. Also, these are Ephemera (Items of short-lived duration, use, or interest) of Ephemera (a short-lived thing). Most of the title of each photograph is referring news headline, however, recent pieces have seemingly abstract titles as the work gradually became autonomous rather than dutifully following the narrative line.”

Please enjoy images of Ayoung’s works!

“CCTV Captures Death Chase, 19 July 2007”, digital c-type print, 160 x 120 cm (Edition 3+2AP) / 100 x 76 cm (Edition 5+2AP), 2008

“CCTV Captures Death Chase, 19 July 2007”, digital c-type print, 160 x 120 cm (Edition 3+2AP) / 100 x 76 cm (Edition 5+2AP), 2008

“Policeman Falls to Death Trying to Save Suicide-Bid Youth, 05 Jun 2008”, digital c-type print, 163 x 210 cm(Edition 3+2AP)  / 150x116cm (Edition 5+2AP), 2009

“Policeman Falls to Death Trying to Save Suicide-Bid Youth, 05 Jun 2008”, digital c-type print, 163 x 210 cm(Edition 3+2AP) / 150x116cm (Edition 5+2AP), 2009

"Not in the Wrong Place at the Wrong Time 2", digital c-type print, 160 x 120 cm, 2010

"Not in the Wrong Place at the Wrong Time 2", digital c-type print, 160 x 120 cm, 2010

"Headless Body Found in Thames, 21 April, 2007", digital c-type print, 160 x 120 cm (Edition 3+2AP) / 100 x 76 cm (Edition 5+2AP), 2007

"Headless Body Found in Thames, 21 April, 2007", digital c-type print, 160 x 120 cm (Edition 3+2AP) / 100 x 76 cm (Edition 5+2AP), 2007





Chinese Artist Ma Hongjie

23 02 2011

Oriental VisArt is pleased to welcome Chinese Artist Ma Hongjie! Ma Hongjie was born in Luoyang, Hunan Province, China, and is currently living and working in Beijing. He graduated from Wuhan University in Wuchang, Hubei, China and specialises in photography. His works have been shown in the following exhibitions:

Solo Exhibition

2009

Family Belongings    Eastern Europe

2008

Family Belongings Beijing 798 Gallery, Beijing

Group Exhibitions

2003

Group Exhibition Local Central Plains Pingyao

2002

International Photography Festival Exhibition Pingyao

He says,

Since I work in a Natural Geographic Magazine as a photographer and editor I have a lot of opportunities to photograph places that people will never have access to. In China, people’s lives dramatically differ according to where they are geographically located. One famous Chinese saying is “Yi Fang Shui Tu Yang Yi Fang Ren” which means different places cultivate different people. China’s land is so vast, there are deserts, tropical climates, rivers, mountains, etc. The lives in these different places are unlike each other, the rich and the poor, the plateau and the water habitats, draught and rainforest. Therefore I pay attention to how these people inhabit their environments and how these environments mold these people’s lives.

Please enjoy some images of Ma Hongjie’s works!

Location: Chen Baer Huqi Ba Village in Hulunbeier grasslands in Inner Mongolia, Date: at 3pm, 19th August in 2007

Location: Chen Baer Huqi Ba Village in Hulunbeier grasslands in Inner Mongolia, Date: at 3pm, 19th August in 2007

Location: The Nansha Islands, Date: 20th May in 2010

Location: The Nansha Islands, Date: 20th May in 2010

Location: Taihang Mountain in He Bei Province, 2007

Location: Taihang Mountain in He Bei Province, 2007

Location: Qinghai Lake, 2006

Location: Qinghai Lake, 2006





Korean Artist Ayoung Kim

9 02 2011

Ayoung Kim was born in Seoul, Korea in 1979, and is currently living and working in London. She received a B.A. in Visual Communication Design at Kookmin University in Seoul in 2002, as well as another B.A. (Honours) in Photography at London College of Communication. In 2010, she earned her M.A. in Fine Art at Chelsea College of Art and Design in London. Ayoung specialises in Photography and New Media. Her works have been shown all over Europe and Korea, including:

Solo Exhibitions
2010 Minima Memoria Street Level Gallery, Glasgow, UK
2009 A Delegation Window Gallery at Gallery Hyundai, Seoul, Korea
Ephemera I-Myu Projects, London, UK
2008 Ephemeral Ephemera Space VAVA, Seoul, Korea
Group Exhibitions
2010 Summer Exhibition 2010 Royal Academy of Arts, London, UK
Window Vol.2 (Upcoming)
Gallery Hyundai, Seoul, Korea
Hi, Mr. Lonely Gana Contemporary and Gana Art Busan, Seoul and Busan, Korea
4482 Contemporary Korean Artists in London Bargehouse, London, UK
Osannolik Digital Festival Kulturnatten, Växjö, Sweden
Ways of Seeing (Part II) I-Myu Projects, London, UK
2009 2009 Seoul International Photography Festival Garden 5, Seoul, Korea
Korea Tomorrow SETEC, Seoul, Korea
Salon09 Four Corners Film, London, UK
Aim High: Joong-Ang Fine Arts Prize Awarded Artists Show Hangaram Museum, Seoul Arts Center, Seoul, Korea
Korean Eye: Moon Generation Saatchi Gallery, London, UK
The Cinematic-Montage Seoul Museum of Art, Seoul, Korea
The Irony Kimi Art, Seoul, Korea
2008 The Series of Boundary between Reality and Fantasy Museum in Gangnamgu Office, Seoul, Korea
4482 Contemporary Korean Artists in London Bargehouse, London, UK
T.error: Your Fear Is an External Object Menupont Galeria, Mucsarnok (Kunsthalle) Budapest, Budapest, Hungary
The 1st Bridge: Scope in The Bridge Gana Art 25th Anniversary, Insa Art Center, Korea
Welcome Home Party Gallery Sun Contemporary, Seoul, Korea
30th Joong-Ang Fine Arts Prize Selected Artists Show Hangaram Museum, Seoul Arts Center, Seoul, Korea
Lateral Thinkers – from the Mind to the Wall inDarmstadt days of photography 2008 Mathildenhohe, Darmstadt, Germany

She says,

“‘It happens that the stage-sets collapse.’ – Camus, The Myth of Sisyphus (Camus, 1955)

These photographs represents various events happened recently in the world or the traces or ambiences of after-the-accidents. I transform them into the stage sets/models I created. Researching of each tragic story, I take pictures from my environment and the actual scene of accident/crime, then alter the images and move them into stage sets according to each context of event.

The reality effect from built-up photographs exists only through camera with proper angle and composition and eventually in the final image, as the stage sets are temporary construction. These can be 3-dimensional photo montages or just stage-sets. Also, these are Ephemera (Items of short-lived duration, use, or interest) of Ephemera (a short-lived thing). Most of the title of each photograph is referring news headline, however, recent pieces have seemingly abstract titles as the work gradually became autonomous rather than dutifully following the narrative line.”

Please enjoy images of Ayoung’s works!

"Entertainers' Suicides in Succession, Why?, 10 Feb, 2007", digital c-type print, 160 x 120 cm (Edition 3+2AP) / 100 x 76 cm (Edition 5+2AP), 2007

"Entertainers' Suicides in Succession, Why?, 10 Feb, 2007", digital c-type print, 160 x 120 cm (Edition 3+2AP) / 100 x 76 cm (Edition 5+2AP), 2007

"Accept North Korea into the Nuclear Club or Bomb It Now, 11 Oct, 2006", digital c-type print, 160 x 120 cm (Edition 3+2AP) / 100 x 76 cm (Edition 5+2AP), 2007

"Accept North Korea into the Nuclear Club or Bomb It Now, 11 Oct, 2006", digital c-type print, 160 x 120 cm (Edition 3+2AP) / 100 x 76 cm (Edition 5+2AP), 2007

"Dead Whale Found on the Shore of Jeju Island, 12 Nov, 2006", digital c-type print, 160 x 120 cm (Edition 3+2AP) / 100 x 76 cm (Edition 5+2AP), 2007

"Dead Whale Found on the Shore of Jeju Island, 12 Nov, 2006", digital c-type print, 160 x 120 cm (Edition 3+2AP) / 100 x 76 cm (Edition 5+2AP), 2007

"British Teacher Found Buried in Bathtub of Sand, 28 March, 2007", digital c-type print, 160 x 120 cm (Edition 3+2AP) / 100 x 76 cm (Edition 5+2AP), 2008

"British Teacher Found Buried in Bathtub of Sand, 28 March, 2007", digital c-type print, 160 x 120 cm (Edition 3+2AP) / 100 x 76 cm (Edition 5+2AP), 2008





Korean Artist Choi Ji Youn

24 01 2011

Choi Ji Youn was born in Seoul, Korea in 1976, where she is still living and working, specialising in photography. She graduated from Seoul University of Arts in 1999 where she received a B.A. in Photography. In 2005, she earned a degree in Multimedia at École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris, France. Her works have been shown at exhibitions in Korea and France, including:

Solo Exhibitions

2007

Taxidermied Images, Duckwon Gallery, Seoul, Korea

2006

Nocturne, CROUS Beaux-Arts Gallery, Paris, France

La mere noire, Hanjin art Centre, Seoul, Korea

2004

Photography, Korean Culture Centre in France, Paris,  France

Group Exhibitions

2010

Main Gauche, Kring Creative Culture Space, Seoul, Korea

2009

SeogyoSixty2009: The game for respect, Gallery Sangsangmadang, Seoul, Korea

2009

Injung Game, KT&G Sang Sang Madang, Seoul, Korea

2008

Opening Reception & Review, Alternative Space Team, Seoul, Korea

2007

Inside Sounds Namsong Museum, Gapyoung, Korea

She says,

Clairoscuro

The settings for my figure photographs are unfamiliar spaces that I have never visited. Like immovable marionettes, the figures remain relaxed, in a subtle tension with the space. The space is like a stage. In my photographs, such space appears somewhat awkward, out of perspective, vague, even weird. The figures have natural but clumsy postures. As in my previous work, their image blurs due to long exposure, to imply their psychological state. These figures appear to gradually adapt to their surroundings, escaping their initial awkwardness.

The memories I have of taking photographs helps me perceive space, regard it as familiar, and enable me to recognize my own psychological space. Through long exposures at night I capture figures and represent psychological states different to those in the daytime. The poses of my figures and certain vague spatial factors enable me to perceive space anew. It is not right to objectify all in our space and time only with our experience. I intend to showcase the space we haven’t perceived and our appearance in this space. I enable viewers to look back on their surroundings by suggesting the burred boundary between reality and non-reality, and uncertainty of experimental memories.

Please enjoy some of Choi Ji Youn‘s work images!

“Ps_45″, lambda print, 120 x 120 cm, 2007

 

“Pp_n21″, lambda print, 120 x 120 cm, 2005

 

“Experimental Conduct II”, lambda print, 120 x 120 cm, 2007
 

“Ps_n37″, lambda print, 120 x 120 cm, 2006









Bangladeshi American Artist ‘Alam Fariba S.’

23 07 2010

Alam Fariba S. was born in Massachusetts, USA, and she is currently living and working in Brooklyn, NYC. She was given her B.A. in Middle East/Asian Languages & Cultures, Columbia University in 1998, a Fulbright Scholar, Fellow in Photography, Fulbright Program, U.S. Information Agency in 1999, and a M.A. in Studio Art & Art Criticism, New York University in 2004.

She says,

“Through my work, I re-imagine space and the boundaries imposed on the colonized female body by static definitions of self, otherness and essentialist mythologies.  I engage a broad spectrum of the photographic tradition–from black and white to digital, anthropological to personal– in order to assert identity and memory as both a suspended and undulating continuum.

I draw from allegories, diagrams, blueprints, archives, Islamic/minimalist techniques, and the mystic/scientific idea that life unfolds in patterns. Symmetry is an anchor in both my process and visual language, as I engage a new psychology for the body’s fracture, fortitude, mystical underpinnings and ascent”.

Please see her publications

The New York Times, A Decade of Emergence, Benjamin Genocchio

The New York Times, Art in Review, Perspectives, Art, Women and Islam, Holland Cotter

WNYC, MoCADA & Museum of African Art present: Women, Art & Islam

The New York Times, A Collection Born of Cultural Dislocation, Benjamin Genocchio

Sultana’s Dream,Uzma Rizvi, Exit Art (catalog)

Enjoy her work images!

“Send Me a Telegram”, acrylic, ceramic, vellum, 16 tiles single file, on wall, wraps into and out of room corner 8 x 8 inches each, 2007

“The Conference of the Birds”, acrylic, ceramic, digital photography, 6 x 6 in (25 tiles), 2008 in hexogonal layout

“Web Across the Cave’s Mouth”, acrylic, ceramic, digital photography, vellum, 8 x 8 in (16 ceramic tiles), 2007

“Alongside Her Utterances in N-Space”, acrylic, ceramic, vellum, original digital c-print, tiles and c-print, 36 x 36 in, 2009





Korean Artist ‘Ji Youn Choi’

9 05 2010

Ji Youn Choi takes photographs to express ‘darkness’ which is formless. ‘Darkness’ on her work is not a background but rather it plays a role of the main subject. She exposes moonlight of a garden and the objects from the place for a while and then takes photos. A quadrangular frame increases the imagination of the audience which gives an impression of airtight space. She chooses this frame to show ‘tenseness’ which is observed in the tranquil atmosphere. She tries not to expose ‘distance’ and gives flat images through filling the background structure like buildings.

She says about her work process;

“I take a note when I walk around anywhere, what is on here and there and how is it. After finding a place I choose a person who would be suitable for the place. The place would be the least affected by light and just an ordinary place which is far from being showy or ruinous. My eyes would play a role of an aperture of a camera as it is difficult to measure how much the objects are exposed in dark. I got to have my own way of measuring the amount of light in dark. It takes about 30 mins to take a cut and then try to give different level of aperture. During this process the model should stand up without movement so that he/she does his/her hard work”.

“The reason why I started expressing ‘darkness’ was I wondered about the feeling of being in a dark abyss. I presumed I could see and feel if I die. I was in agony of an absolute darkness, how we could feel it and how I could express by photography. ‘Darkness’ on my work is not the background and rather the main issue. Neither a model nor light should be emphasised in my work. Light from building is less after midnight so I took most photographs in dawn. It was mostly a cloudy morning and set structure which had no light from stars or street lights”.

Enjoy her work images!!

‘Gazing up at the stars’, Lambda print, 80 x 80cm, Paris, 2004

‘MTIP_SE_35′, Lambda print,80 x 80cm, Seoul, 2007

‘Autoportrait’, Lambda print,120 x 120cm, Paris, 2005

‘Ps_45′, Lambda print, 120 x 120cm, Seoul, 2007

‘JP_post 9′, Lambda print, 120 x 120cm, Paris 2005





Korean Artist ‘Ayoung Kim’

25 04 2010

Ayoung Kim was born in 1979, Seoul, Korea and currently living and working in London. She was given a B.A. (Honours) Photography from London College of Communication, London, UK (1st Class in Dissertation) and now doing her M.A. Fine Art at Chelsea College of Art and Design, London, UK. She has shown her works globally as below;

Solo Exhibitions

2010   (Title Undecided), Street Level Gallery, Glasgow, UK (Upcoming)
2009   A Delegation, Window Gallery at Gallery Hyundai, Seoul, Korea
2009   Ephemera, I-Myu Projects, London, UK
2008   Ephemeral Ephemera, Space VAVA, Seoul, Korea

Selected Group Exhibitions

2010  ‘Window Vol.2′, Gallery Hyundai, Seoul, Korea (Upcoming)
2010  (Title Undecided), Gana Contemporary and Gana Art Busan, Seoul and Busan, Korea (Upcoming)
2010  ’4482 Contemporary Korean Artists in London’, Bargehouse, London, UK
2010  ’Osannolik Digital Festival’ in Kulturnatten, Växjö, Sweden
2010  ’Ways of Seeing (Part II)’, I-Myu Projects, London, UK
2009  ’2009 Seoul International Photography Festival’, Garden 5, Seoul, Korea
2009  ’Korea Tomorrow’, SETEC, Seoul, Korea
2009  ’Salon09, Four Corners Film, London, UK
2009  ’Aim High’, Joong-Ang Fine Arts Prize Awarded Artists Show, Hangaram Museum, Seoul Arts Center, Seoul, Korea
2009  ’Korean Eye’: Moon Generation, Saatchi Gallery, London, UK
2009  ’The Cinematic-Montage’, Seoul Museum of Art, Seoul, Korea
2009  ’The Irony’, Kimi Art, Seoul, Korea
2008  ’The Series of Boundary between Reality and Fantasy’: Museum in Gangnamgu Office, Seoul, Korea
2008  ’4482 Contemporary Korean Artists in London’, Bargehouse, London, UK
2008  ”T.error: Your Fear Is an External Object’, Menupont Galeria, Mucsarnok (Kunsthalle) Budapest, Budapest, Hungary
2008  ’The 1st Bridge’: Scope in The Bridge, Gana Art 25th Anniversary, Insa Art Center, Korea
2008  ’Welcome Home Party’, Gallery Sun Contemporary, Seoul, Korea
2008  ’30th Joong-Ang Fine Arts Prize Selected Artists Show’, Hangaram Museum, Seoul Arts Center, Seoul, Korea
2008  ’Lateral Thinkers – from the Mind to the Wall in Darmstadt days of photography 2008′, Mathildenhohe, Darmstadt, Germany

Born into a postmodern world, and self-cast as a nomad caught between cultures, Ayoung Kim returns to the scene of the crime. But where Weegee found human drama, Warhol found visual sensation and Sherman found layers of remove from human experience, Kim goes in search of herself. A dutiful student of Guy Debord and Jean Baudrillard, Kim knows that the Society of the Spectacle is triumphant, and that we have entered an order

of representation in which the copies have no original. And yet… Mid-20th century existentialism demanded that individuals face the meaninglessness of life squarely—that they proceed in full knowledge that there is no god, no heaven and no redemption. Kim faces the postmodern crisis of representation with a similar courage. She deconstructs and reconstructs a world of images to explore her own place within it.

Her dizzying angular perspectives provide sets for staging herself, a character dislocated and displaced, finding echoes of her own experience in disasters that happened just around the corner, or to girls whose experience as students abroad mirrors her own (until the moment they disappeared). Meaning emerges from Kim’s fearless examination of the meaninglessness of these small catastrophes. She cannot unlock the mystery of Alexander Litvinenko’s death or an anonymous city suicide; the construction of each dense delirious image is an opportunity for the artist to project herself imaginatively into a scenario, to probe its poetic and metaphorical possibilities. Wordplay, classical mythology and visual puns are enlisted in a dream-like logic that brings the stories new life. Each cityscape becomes its own self-contained world, drawn from world events, but ultimately autonomous of them. Kim is not the first to explore the urban crime scene, but she is the first to explore it in this way.

Ayoung Kim restages the crime with the cool logic of the detective and the gruesome fascination of the voyeur. Her cutting and pasting takes place in three dimensional space, yielding impossible spaces for the eye to penetrate. In the process of montage some of the original meaning of the images is lost, and other meanings accrue. There is a hopefulness to this project. The work argues that fresh discoveries can be made, even in the tabloid detritus of contemporary life. The work is also elegiac. Kim proposes that in pausing to look back at the settings of these sordid urban tragedies, we may rediscover something we have lost. (2008, Lucy Soutter)

Enjoy her work images!!

‘Headless body found in Thames 21 April2007′, 160x120cm

 

‘CCTV captures death chase, 19 July 2007′, 160x120cm, 2008

 

‘Dead whale found on the shore of Jeju island,12 Nov, 2006′, 160x120cm

 

‘Man Hits Bus Roof After 70Ft Death Plunge, 29 May, 2007′, 160x120cm

 

‘British teacher found buried in bathtub of sand, 28 March, 2007′, 160x120cm

 

‘Chaos caused by monster of Blitz 15 May, 2007′, 160x120cm








Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 106 other followers