Installation view © Space Willing N Dealing

Space Willing N Dealing holds the solo exhibition series 《The Showroom》 from June 9 to July 12.

This series features five artists—Roh Choong Hyun, Seo Dong Wook, Jung Yong Kuk, Kang Seok Ho, and Kim Yeon Yong—each presenting a solo exhibition highlighting their distinctive artistic practices. While focusing on the individual worlds of the artists through their recent works, the exhibition also addresses the issue of production in contemporary art by examining the structure of the series as a whole and the relationships between the exhibitions.

Unlike typical group exhibitions that link artists through common themes or forms, this project reconfigures the spatial aspects of exhibitions along a single timeline. Each exhibition is presented in a one-week relay format, reflecting condensed, minimal conditions of a solo show. Through this format—its editorial nature, the transitions between shows, and the exchange of values and sensations that occur between them—the exhibition investigates the fundamental problem of art production in a time when the productive value of creative acts is infinitely deferred.


Installation view © Space Willing N Dealing

《Landscapes and Mind》 is about framing. I have always hoped that through framing, one’s heart would quietly permeate into the scenery of reality. This attitude is connected to my past efforts to distance myself from emotional excess, self-pity, and overt social engagement. In this context, I was deeply moved by Peter Doig’s everyday paintings, which I encountered by chance in 2004. They revived a rich lyricism of the everyday—nostalgia for faint memories—that was difficult to find in Korean contemporary painting.

Even though viewing and depicting landscapes through personal sensibility is not a new method, there remains room for it to become new painting. Additionally, the way he pursued painterly fluidity—utilizing photography while introducing abstraction—felt fresh. Perhaps in Korea, we haven’t had the artistic breathing room to allow for this kind of everyday lyricism. In truth, lyricism has long been neglected in Korean painting, even though it clearly exists in daily life. This may be due to our political and social realities, which left no space for it.

But it is also difficult to uncritically affirm lyricism in painting today. Lyricism can quickly become trite or devolve into cliché. It also has the weakness of reducing complex social realities into sentimental experiences. That may be why it hasn’t become a dominant approach in contemporary art. I believe lyricism must be placed in a space of the heart, not arising from fiction, lies, flamboyance, or exaggeration, but appearing in humble ways through the ordinary.

Looking back, the landscape paintings of the Joseon Dynasty honored realism and vividly conveyed seasonal sensations, reflection, and lyricism through such an attitude. I believe painting today must strive to carry that same sensibility and perspective.

(Artist Note by Roh Choong Hyun)

References