Oriental VisArt and La Magie des Vins Sàrl

7 06 2011

Oriental VisArt hosted our first-ever Wine and Art night, in partner with Michel Vialle La Magie des Vins Sàrl on Friday, 3 June 2011.

The event featured wine tasting « Château de Chaintres » Saumur-Champigny AOC, wines from the region Châteaux de la Loire. Guests were treated to these wines while enjoying the works of Hyungji Park, as the event takes place at Nest Gallery in Geneva, Switzerland, during Oriental VisArt’s exhibition « Neon Plants, Night Lights and Travel to the Galaxy ».

The wine tasting menu featured five, crisp summer wines:

  • Two whites:
    • a Burgundy, the “Mâcon Chardonnay” 2009 de Benjamin et Mallory Talmard
    • a Bordeaux, the “Blanc Sec” 2009 de Château Parenchère
  • One rosé :
    • the Bordeaux « Clairet » 2009 de Château Parenchère
  • And two reds :
    • a Chianti 2009 : the « Titolato Strozzi » produced in San Gimignano by the Prince Strozzi
    • a Saumur Champigny : the “Château Chaintres » produced by in the Loire Castles region by Comte Gaël de Tigny

Photos of the event:

Summery wine selection

Summery wine selection

Sponsors from La Magie des Vins

Sponsors from La Magie des Vins

Sponsors and organiser Kayla Hye K. Yang

Sponsors and organiser Kayla Hye K. Yang

Guests

Guests

Guests

Showroom view

Guests and our organiser

Guests and our organiser

Guests and the work of Hyungji Park

Guests and the work of Hyungji Park

Showroom view

Showroom view

Wine night

Wine night





« 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’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





Korean Artist Hyungji Park

12 05 2011

Hyungji Park was born in Seoul, Korea in 1977. In 2001, she earned her B.F.A. in Fine Art from Hongik University in Seoul, Korea. In 2006 she earned an M.F.A. in Fine Art from Korean National University of Arts in Seoul, Korea. Park also studied Fine Art at Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design in London, UK, where she is currently living and working today. She specialises in Painting.

Hyungji Park’s first solo exhibition in Switzerland, Neon Plants, Night Lights and
Travel to the Galaxy,
begins 23 May 2011 in Geneva, Switzerland. Her other exhibitions include:

Solo Exhibition
2010 Fake Tales From Somewhere Harrington Mill Studios, Nottingham, UK,
Strange Scenery Nordisk Kunst Plattform Project Space, Brusand, Norway
Group Exhibitions
2010 Guasch Coranty International Panting Prize 2010 The Center of Art Tecla Sala, Barcelona, Spain
4482[Sasapari] Korean contemporary Artists in London Bargehouse, London, UK
2009 Raymond Gun: Platfrom DegreeArt.com Gallery, London, UK
Time, Time, Time Terrace Studios, London, UK
Drawn In Sidcot Arts Centre, North Somerset, UK
Flash Company Cecil Sharp House, London, UK
Private Practice 2 DegreeArt.com Gallery, London, UK
2008 The Tomorrow People: Artists of the Future Now 2008 Elevator Gallery, London, UK
Private Practice 1 Chinese Characters Contemporary Art Space, Budapest, Hungary
4482 Bargehouse, London, UK
2006 Like Something (Duo Show) 175 Gallery, Seoul, Korea

She says,

“My practice brings visual references and sources from everyday surroundings, pop culture and digital images from contemporary media. The references and sources are displaced into the painting language in my practice. I approach not only painting as a visual medium but also painting as a physical medium. I am searching for ways of creating a new and playful dialogue between the material conventions of painting and the abundance of imagery I find around me.

<Neon Plants, Night Lights and Travel to the Galaxy> includes my previous series Strange Scenery and recent works. Strange Scenery creates fictitious scenes and landscapes by combining visual sources from snapshots, images from the internet, magazines, advertisement and daily remnants. They are extracted, dissected and mixed with other images, resulting in strange new scenes and landscapes. On the other hand, in more recent work, I have an interest in everyday imagery in urban life and have more focus on exploring ways of interpreting in paint, the visual grammars and atmospheres found in display windows, illuminations, objects and designs.

In both Strange Scenery and the recent work, the source images are interpreted or reinterpreted through a particular handling of the paint. They are often further transformed into abstractions that deal with on the term of the material through the process of painting. I translate the visual elements of the sources into the matter of paint and painting language, allowing the paint to reclaim these images through colors, loose brush strokes, dripping and layers of paints. The original visual information from the sources are transformed, omitted, and deformed through being interpreted into paint. They are no longer placed in their original contexts rather they are reframed as something unfamiliar, functioning only within the structure of painting.”

Please enjoy some of her work images!

Bubble Castle, Acrylic on linen, 95x130cm, 2011

Bubble Castle, Acrylic on linen, 95x130cm, 2011

Neon Plants, Acrylic on linen, 130x145cm, 2011

Neon Plants, Acrylic on linen, 130x145cm, 2011

Boramae Park, Acrylic on linen, 130x145cm, 2011

Boramae Park, Acrylic on linen, 130x145cm, 2011

What happened is unknown, but ... is crystal clear 1, oil on canvas, 77x102cm, 2010

What happened is unknown, but ... is crystal clear 1, oil on canvas, 77x102cm, 2010

What happened is unknown, but ... is crystal clear 4, oil on linen, 77x102cm, 2010

What happened is unknown, but ... is crystal clear 4, oil on linen, 77x102cm, 2010





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)





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