Installation view of 《181cm, 83kg, XS》 (Laheen Gallery, 2021) ©Laheen Gallery

In April 2021, Laheen Gallery presents an exhibition by artist Young Uk Yi. This marks the young artist’s return to a solo exhibition after approximately five years, following his previous shows in 2013 and 2016. Over the years, Yi’s practice has evolved with a distinct trajectory. While he initially focused on realism using oil painting as his primary medium, he has since produced works that combine unrelated images into singular compositions, and is now exploring the boundless potential of pattern.

This exhibition holds particular significance for the artist, who has just entered his thirties. The shackling reality that forces a passive response, the irony between financial stability and sincere artistic pursuit—all these concerns, as with many in his generation, overwhelm the artist with anxiety and longing. In other words, this solo show represents a critical juncture at which Yi must determine the direction of his future work.

Installation view of 《181cm, 83kg, XS》 (Laheen Gallery, 2021) ©Laheen Gallery

In the works presented in this exhibition, masses of rounded characters forming patterns fill the entire canvas. At first glance, one might perceive these as cheerful images. However, peeling away each layer of the surface allows us to touch the artist’s psychological state with our fingertips.

Mocking the double standards surrounding sex and sexuality in our society, these characters are secretly engaged in suggestive acts. Their meticulously aligned arrangement also appears overly deliberate and strategic. This condition of concealment can be read as a form of constraint or bondage. Yet, just as some say that repetitive motion can lead to a state of mental blankness, a focused gaze into these patterns evokes a sense of liberation that counters the forces of suppression. This is precisely the artist’s intention.

Through the deliberate act of piling up each object according to his own choices and will, the artist finds himself immersed in self-satisfaction and a sense of release. Though the consequences are his alone to bear, the process of repetitively filling and emptying the patterns—executed with precision and calculation—becomes a spiritual path for the artist, a journey toward discovering a creative world that suits him exactly.

This aspect of his practice recalls the figure of homo ludens, one who blooms through artistic play while engaging in competitive play with the self. If viewers can imagine the psychological state of the artist that emanates through his fingertips and heart, they too may join in the artist’s joyful play through this exhibition, 《181cm, 83kg, XS》.

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