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Kwang-Young Chun
Aggregation
Painting,Relief and Sculpture
7 June - 1 July 2006
Annely Juda Fine Art is proud to announce the
Korean artist Kwang-Young Chun’s first European exhibition.
Educated in Korea and America this exciting artist has brought traditional
Korean craft and modern art face to face. Large wall reliefs and sculptures
give the appearance of topography; indistinct surfaces punctured by meteoric
depressions, a large object that appears to have arrived violently or
is shedding it’s outer skin. These abstract and powerful works change
once again on closer inspection; We see that the these shapes and vistas
are in fact made up of thousands of tiny paper wrapped packages, the paper
covered in printed asian calligraphy; this is the traditional Korean element
of Chun’s powerful contemporary art.
To wrap and pack objects in paper for transport or storage, wrapping medicines
in paper packets, food or books wrapped in cloth, this is an integral
part of Korean culture; the culture of bojagi. This informs Chun’s
use of materials; making its first striking impression on the artist as
a young boy in his uncle’s pharmacy, watching his uncle unwrap and
rewrap medicines, stored in paper packets. Using traditional Korean paper
taken from old and discarded books, Chun constructs small paper wrapped
packets. These number close on 7000 for each relief, which he then attaches
by hand to make the reliefs and sculptures. His works are powerfully evocative,
alien surfaces pock marked with depressions and fissures, and within these
features are the gentle undulations of colour produced by the variations
in the differing papers and texts derived from books, the alternating
size and scale of the packets jostling to fight their way to the surface
of the works.
At this time when the focus of the art world is looking to Asia, it is
exciting to see the traditional and the contemporary in Korean art coalesces
so succinctly in this vibrant exhibition of Kwang-Young Chun.
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