Installation view of 《Blue Lung》 (GalleryMEME, 2024) ©GalleryMEME

From April 24 to May 12, 2024, GalleryMEME M’ cube presents Hur Yeonhwa’s solo exhibition 《Blue Lung》, which depicts landscapes of water. Hur Yeonhwa has worked with water-related landscapes, expressing bodies and materials that depart from everyday synesthetic perception through sculpture, painting, and installation. The exhibition 《Blue Lung》 addresses variation and sedimentation through the landscapes of the deep sea and coral.

The lung is an organ of respiration that takes in oxygen and expels carbon dioxide, enabling the metabolic activity of living organisms. Oxygen absorbed through breathing dissolves into the blood, circulates throughout the body, and sustains the organism’s dynamic transformations. Breathing beings are placed within situations that change over time; their outer skins undergo supplementary accretions during growth or experience subtraction through aging. The works presented in 《Blue Lung》 exist within processes of change.


Installation view of 《Blue Lung》 (GalleryMEME, 2024) ©GalleryMEME

Works that make up the exhibition reintroduce past bodily sculptures alongside paintings with fluid backgrounds. Bodily sculptures other than Viewport(2017) and Floating People(2022) serve as foundations, upon which natural materials such as crystals, minerals, and coral, as well as industrial materials, are attached and reconstructed.

Paintings that previously existed only as textures of water accumulate multiple layers over time. The exhibition was conceived by recalling how coral reefs function as frameworks—like lungs—within marine ecosystems as they are constructed and expanded outward, and how corals are transplanted onto artificial structures introduced for environmental protection and continue to grow.

Works that once occupied space in differing positions are assigned new roles and put to renewed use. Variables newly generated through irregular events once again become sedimentary matter, functioning and carrying the potential for further transformation. 《Blue Lung》 captures dynamic situations in which modulated generation forms new cycles of circulation.

Within the ceaseless waves that surge like tides, one way to find balance might be to strip many things away; however, the artist instead chose to compress those things that have passed through the warmth of the hands and been given space.

These are things that have been compressed, gained weight, and descended downward.

Breathing slowly along the blue lung, let us peer into the deep, blue depths of the sea.

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