Exhibitions
《Is there any place for us?》, 2021.08.19 – 2021.09.11, ThisWeekendRoom
August 15, 2021
ThisWeekendRoom
Installation
view of 《Is there any place for us?》 ©ThisWeekendRoom
ThisWeekendRoom presents a two
person exhibition by Moka Lee and Jiwon Choi, 《Is there any place for us?》 The title of the exhibition is inspired by a
novel, ‘From the Zero Person’s Point of View’ (2019), written by Yoon Haeseo;
which deals with experiences that belong to everyone through layering multiple
views that individuals can relate to in contemporary society. From the images
the artists gather, they draw a universal sentiment by staying close to the
border between the subject and object.
Installation
view of 《Is there any place for us?》 ©ThisWeekendRoom
Moka Lee brings all that exists
outside of everyday life onto the canvas. Lee performs labor intensive painting
after selecting images from online or photographs taken by her acquaintances.
When the painting is at the point of completion through fine brushstrokes, the
final artwork is far from what the original image looked like. Instead, the
facial expression under the fine layers of color is enough to transfer the
subtle emotions; through this, Lee detects both the alienness and the effects
of Déjà Vu. Jiwon Choi composes the frame with imaginative objet that have been
smoothly polished.
Although these figures don’t
exist in real life, they come across more realistic than one would imagine;
given that the images are reproduced on a two-dimensional support. Perhaps it
is because the objet has a similar expression as human figures; small but
piercing black pupils avoid eye contact with the audience, but it is definitely
staring back at something, and red lips and flushed cheeks seem to disprove of
the internal emotions.
Installation
view of 《Is there any place for us?》 ©ThisWeekendRoom
Narratives that the two emerging
artists enfold are symbolic in a way, as it is a representation of our
unpredictable future. Lee and Choi gather fragments of unspecified images while
they travel between light and darkness, you and I, and reality and dream; then
these fragments transcend to the audience. When the forms in the paintings are
not labelled, the stories of the figures can be claimed by all of us.