Installation view of 《CHEMICAL VOLUME》 © P21

Starting October 1 through November 6, 2021, P21 presents Hyungkoo Lee’s solo exhibition 《CHEMICAL VOLUME》. Following 《PENETRALE》(2019), this is the artist’s second solo exhibition at P21, featuring six new works installed across the two venues, P1 and P2.

Chemical Volume, the work that shares its title with the exhibition, is an installation sculpture that encapsulates the various techniques and approaches the artist has recently pursued. The organic materiality of polyurethane foam and papier-mâché gives rise to seemingly accidental effects, yet these are in fact the result of countless test experiments. The metal wires and finely crafted components that bind the dismantled entities together are processed with near-obsessive precision, expressing the artist’s distinctly refined and meticulous visual identity.

Resembling the orbit of celestial bodies, this organism hangs from the ceiling, enacting subtle movements while generating endlessly shifting flows as the viewer’s gaze moves around it. The mirrors that reflect the body and the transparent PET bottles that allow visual penetration function as mediators that alternately align with and diverge from the viewer’s perspective, prompting a renewed awareness of one’s own body.


Installation view of 《CHEMICAL VOLUME》 © P21

Meanwhile, the sculptures and drawings dispersed throughout P2 appear like fragmented bodily structures—abstract forms that oscillate between abstraction and figuration and seem to represent anatomical structures invisible to the naked eye. These liberated forms are coated in vivid, diverse colors and installed across the ceiling and walls.

In particular, polar, a mass-like form extending from thin nickel wires, appears precarious yet foregrounds the tension that enables the elements to sustain one another. The objects occupying the P2 space—seemingly on the verge of shaking loose or bonding with something else—are fragments of the artist’s freely cast experiments concerning bodily perception.

Based on the ‘body’ as a sensing subject, Hyungkoo Lee has consistently continued his sculptural experiments. Having created fictional devices that disrupt rigid corporeality or expanded the realm of sensation by referencing the bodily organs of animals, Lee now moves beyond dissecting the skeleton and imagines the exhibition space itself as an external bodily wall or microcosm, observing the responses that emerge within it.

Within this context, 《CHEMICAL VOLUME》 invites viewers to embody—through their whole bodies—the chemical phenomena generated ceaselessly through collisions between constants and variables, subject and object, artwork and viewer.

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