Ik-Joong Kang 《The Moon is Rising》, Gallery Hyundai, 2022 © Gallery Hyundai

Ik-Joong Kang unites and connects different cultures, languages, and environments in his work to express a message of hope for the near future. Just as Korea’s Hangul writing system combines consonants and vowels to form syllables, Kang’s artistic work forms small universes through the combination of all things that exist in opposition in our world. It reveals the beauty of coexistence through the complementary relationships of paintings and objects that capture hybrid languages and a world of purity. 

The themes of the work in the first floor’s gallery and the Dugahun Gallery area “moon” and “moon jar.” For Ik-Joong Kang, the moon and moon jar embody the most Korean qualities in terms of culture, sentiments, and aesthetic values. Created by combining top and bottom portions by hand to be joined in the kiln, the moon jar exemplifies the idea of “connection”—a theme that Kang has dedicated his life to—in both its form and the way in which it is produced.

The work in his ‘Moon Jar’ series resembles the moon shining serenely over the world from the night sky, with its subtle milky colors betraying the marks of nature and time, the alluring curves of its imperfect proportions, and the tactile qualities of its coarse yet sleek surface. To create his new series ‘The Moon is Rising’, he recalled the waning of the moon over time and the multicolored moonbows that form around the moon due to sunlight reflected off its surface.

Ik-Joong Kang 《The Moon is Rising》, Gallery Hyundai, 2022 © Gallery Hyundai

The second floor’s gallery presents work on the themes of “mountains” and nature,” which offer a glimpse at Ik-Joong Kang’s ideas emphasizing harmony between human beings and nature. A series of around 30 drawings hanging side-by-side in the gallery, ‘The Moon is Rising’ shows new work that reinterprets the traditional landscape painting through the artist’s perspective. Using ink to combine images of mountains and fields, moons and waterfalls, moon jars, people and houses, or birds and puppies, he presents backgrounds that use oil pastels in different colors.

This drawing series, with its emphasis on harmonious blends of light colors and free-flowing brushstrokes, is a reflection of Kang’s artistic attitude and the joy with which he approaches his work. As its individual 48×48cm works are presented in groups at a height of around 4.5 meters, Kang’s ‘Mountain’ series creates majestic scenes that call to mind the image of an ink-and-wash landscape painting.

The method used to produce the Mountain series is one in which the artist applies the lines of the mountains in acrylic paints on small wooden cubes of different heights and places them on a panel, after which he burns or blackens the surface to visualize a landscape bearing marks of the passage of time. The colors applied to the panels’ sides give visual expression to the passing of the four seasons on the mountain.

Placed with the ‘Mountain’ series is Kang’s installation work We Eat Together, for which 500 overturned old rice bowls are stacked to form a mountain in one part of the gallery; through them, bird sounds recorded around the DMZ are played back, echoing through the gallery. Kang uses the word “family” to describe us sharing joy and sadness in our lives as though partaking in a shared meal—evoking concepts associated with “North” and “South,” “kinship,” and “nationhood.” 


Ik-Joong Kang 《The Moon is Rising》, Gallery Hyundai, 2022 © Gallery Hyundai

The gallery on the basement level offers a look at language and life wisdom. The series ‘Things I Know’ is a representative example of the artist’s work writing short sentences in Korean and English to convey the wisdom he has acquired in his life—phrases that elicit lighthearted laughter while also sending a resonant message.

This is one of Ik-Joong Kang’s key series, bringing together diverse cultures to form a collective voice transcending space and time. With letters that come together to form words and meaningful sentences, the work alludes to the “connectedness” that represents a key element in the artist’s body of work, where individuals come together to form societies and “we” come together in unity.

On the tables that extend across the gallery, visitors can see sketches from the artist’s exhibitions and public projects since the 1990s, along with previously unseen archival materials. Ever since the 1980s, Ik-Joong Kang has continued working to connect the world.

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