Installation view of 《Unfamiliar Expedition》 © DrawingRoom

DrawingRoom presents its first curated exhibition of 2021, 《Unfamiliar Expedition》, on view from January 19 to February 10. The process of departing for an unfamiliar place always carries both excitement and fear, inevitably involving encounters with unfamiliar sensations. The four artists of 《Unfamiliar Expedition》 act as travelers exploring through their own distinct perspectives, guiding viewers into the spaces that unfold between the past that has brushed past us, the present as daily life, and the unpredictable future.

Hyewon Kim begins her journey by posing a fundamental question: What is painting, and what constitutes its essence? The everyday landscapes she selects—so ordinary and familiar that they resemble samples—become material for studying the process through which painting becomes possible. Watercolor, acrylic, oil, and other materials traditionally used in painting are applied through meticulous planning and occasionally mixed with freedom, tracing unexpected pathways toward pictoriality.

Installation view of 《Unfamiliar Expedition》 © DrawingRoom

Lee Ahyeon seeks methods of perceiving objects that shift depending on the viewer. By imagining herself as an insect, she constructs transformed and fabricated spacetime from the insect’s viewpoint and perspective. Just as one observes plant cells through a microscope, the enlarged landscapes and expanded voids sensed through an insect’s eyes radiate within forms balancing between foreground and background, accompanied by amorphous abstract imagery.

Lee Younghoo focuses on the value of “delusion,” which the artist considers the most human form of behavior. The propellers and gear fragments functioning as modules in his work operate as components within the larger collective of “delusion.” Rotating and emitting light from their respective positions, this collective activates metaphors of value–non-value–worthlessness, persistently suggesting shifts in perception.

Im Sungoo unfolds a journey of tracing images created through the tension between her present self and the personal memories embedded within her, using drawing as her primary medium. The first-person, flattened impressions of memory—often more vivid when one closes their eyes—manifest through dense, persistent graphite lines and masses. These drawings offer an experience akin to swimming through a dreamlike or virtual world.

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