Installation view ©HITE Collection

Jina Park portrays on canvas instant, coincidental moments of ordinary and usual situations that she snapshoots with her camera. Her new works in this solo show captures various scenes of people waiting in line for baggage sealing or boarding time, and for somebody’s arrival. Sound work in collaboration with Peter Gahn who is a composer based in Germany, gives visual and auditory experience of the paintings and music, within a separate multisensory space. Park’s recent work series of gallery spaces are also presented in addition to the new works.

With her interest in using camera, earlier in 2004 she has been applying the means of taking snapshots and painting directly from them. Especially at the time she painted four sequential snapshots onto a single canvas. Gallery series, on the other hand, represents her slightly different and recent style of painting just one scene in one frame, using entire canvas instead of dividing into multiple scenes and frames.

Installation view ©HITE Collection

The new works of the airport series take airport as somewhere in particular, in a sense that it does not belong to anywhere between one’s departure and arrival. Considering her previous series of work instantly captures her surroundings, the new works are more focused on the chosen spatial subject of “airport”. The exhibition title, “Neon Grey Terminal”, also expresses the particular color tones of airports that the artist came to realize. Airport is a place covered in grey, but at the same time diverse colors are projected onto its glossy floor. Park calls this unique color mixture “Neon Grey”, and created her own grey paintings by painting in loose layers of various colors. While her characteristically loose brush strokes seem proper for expressing instant snapshots, her style of painting in light layers maintain temporality and airport a spatial sense at the same time.

What occupies the core space in this airport series is the grey planar, the floor with the reflection of the pillar, people and other objects that stand on it. Especially her technique of expressing the subtle, glossy floor surface can be linked to Gustave Caillebotte’s The Floor Scrapers (1895) that is rich and delicately realistic in expression. Park’s Airport Grey (2014) series depicts flat grey surface that can be easily seen in the architectural elements of an airport. This work, to say, resembles Claude Monet’s Water Lilies considering that the spatial axis switched from horizontal to vertical in both works. As such, the new works are characterized by the attention to the floor and the expansion of the view due to the newly found subject; simultaneously, the possibility of abstraction is raised through the introduction of even and flat architectural surface.

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