Installation view of 《Golden Age》 © Arario Gallery

Through our lived experiences in the real world, we acquire concepts, values, knowledge, and worldviews. Thus, the totality of an individual’s thoughts is always deeply related to the real world that person inhabits. Perception itself is formed in relation to this reality. Painting, too, is grounded in an awareness of the real world.

However, many artists attempt to move beyond the simple depiction of reality to portray another world beyond it. Sejin Park also transcends the physical laws of the real world in her landscapes, creating her own world of scenery through persistent curiosity, questioning, and imagination about existence and the universe.

Over the past seven years, Park has consistently presented landscape paintings through exhibitions at the Venice Biennale, Samsung Museum of Art, and Sarubia. Her solo exhibition 《Golden Age》 at Arario Gallery encapsulates and clearly reveals the essence of her landscape practice.

The title Golden Age literally means the golden era or peak period of something. But in the artist’s words, “Golden Age” refers to a world in which the existence of every entity is acknowledged; where distinctions between one thing and another disappear, and where everything—from here to there—is continuously connected.

In her painting The Old Man’s Space, Park conveys this concept eloquently. The work depicts a mountain covered in grass of a golden hue, representing the landscape of an ordinary Korean hillside in February—a transitional moment between winter and spring, when new sprouts begin to rise. The bare branches within the landscape become the old man’s coat rack, while worn chairs and furniture offer him a place to rest.

Ultimately, Park’s “Golden Age” is a time and space where all elements within the landscape are united as one—a state of total harmony that becomes, in itself, a perfect golden era.


Installation view of 《Golden Age》 © Arario Gallery

“Life is the continuity of living—the time we confirm through existence. Even in places where time seems to stand still, the absence of time leaves traces, and I discovered them belatedly.”— From the artist’s note
 
In the real world we inhabit, the concepts of time and space always govern us. We are constantly situated in a specific time and a specific place. Yet it is precisely at the boundaries that transcend these physical conditions where we may encounter new worlds.

While photography or conventional landscape painting captures only a single moment within the flow of time, Park distorts and transforms time and space to reinterpret them anew, thereby creating an entirely new world. In her works, countless stains and layers of paint merge to form a surface, which becomes a single landscape. Through this reconstruction—extending beyond the limits of distant perspective—she envisions the possibility of a world connected beyond the landscape itself.

Just as the time and place we now occupy may one day become someone else’s past, or perhaps an approaching future, Park’s landscapes refuse to remain still; they continuously aspire toward change and transformation, embracing the continuity of time.

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