Installation view of 《Seven Times》 © Artspace Hohwa

The HOBAN Cultural Foundation presents 《Seven Times》, the exhibition of selected artists from the 8th National Young Artists Art Competition (H-EAA; Hoban Emerging Artist Awards). Drawing significant interest, the competition received applications from 728 artists. Through portfolio reviews and in-person evaluations of artworks, seven artists—08AM (Sejin Park), Minji Kim, Junho Moon, Hyunji Park, Songjun Lee, Eunwoo Jo, and Seong Joon Hong—were ultimately selected and are presented in this exhibition. Within the linear flow of time, these artists each place emphasis on their own temporal experiences, constructing distinct artistic worlds.

08AM (Sejin Park) investigates phenomena in which the pursuit of individual uniqueness ultimately arrives at universal forms, producing visual entities in their purest states. By depicting moments of surprise or clumsiness through lively characters, he embeds narratives within popular imagery. Through such devices that paradoxically return viewers to painting itself, the artist reactivates the questions embedded within his works.

Minji Kim proposes reflection through familiar everyday scenes, painting quiet impressions glimpsed through car windows while traveling back and forth to her hometown. Ink layered onto hanji absorbs the muted sound of rain, and the landscape fades beyond falling droplets. By deliberately juxtaposing unfamiliar gazes, windows, and rain, Kim employs the painterly medium to evoke deep empathy and create a poetic atmosphere.

Junho Moon continually philosophizes within his works by endowing paintings—rooted in questions that begin with nature—with natural materiality. Utilizing the physical properties of silicone, a commonly used material, he builds up layers and likens their subsequent physical transformations to natural processes. By questioning how works resembling nature become processed landscapes and undergo change, he challenges fixed perceptions and conventions.

Installation view of 《Seven Times》 © Artspace Hohwa

Hyunji Park conveys tactile messages through tufting techniques in order to capture faint memories or wishes. Nature offered comfort on anxious days, and threads extending from her fingertips became trees and flowers as she sought to express warmth. Titled “Utopia,” her works quietly self-generate within beautifully swelling surfaces reminiscent of dreams.

Songjun Lee explores the realism and reproducibility of photographic media, articulating discussions on the boundary between reality and virtuality. By reconstructing pixels and translating transformed images into sculptural language, he presents works as stainless-steel mirror balls. Expanding this approach, Lee focuses on the incidental visual effects generated by repetitive forms, pursuing an aesthetic inquiry.

Eunwoo Jo investigates themes that traverse the boundary between machines and humans through light, sound, and interactive art. By visualizing brainwaves and linking them to machines through reprogramming, his work enables interaction with “non-being” rather than human entities. Through methods that interweave these two realms, he proposes directions for coexistence, prompting philosophical reflection on humanity and science-based technology.

Seong Joon Hong intentionally constructs illusion within the painterly frame, yet by delving into the materiality of painting itself, he approaches more fundamental questions. In his works, what vision initially perceives is the realistic representation of objects; subsequently, what is physically recognized is painting as a three-dimensional material entity. Continuing an art-historical lineage that has addressed surface and support, the artist seeks multilayered painterliness.

The seven artists in this exhibition have each traversed countless overlapping moments of confusion, rendering their own scenes. Some metaphorize landscapes glimpsed ahead of others as unidentified substances; others filter shocking contemporary moments through painterly devices; still others, unable to step away from their place, extract and contain landscapes traversed by their own minds.

Employing not only canvas but also hanji, silicone, fabric, stainless steel, light, and sound, the artists infinitely expand the possibilities of art, offering insight into recent trends in multi-media research. Narratives that originate from individual artists ultimately transform into aesthetic forms through their works, remaining as universal messages.

The HOBAN Cultural Foundation hopes that the keenly sensed experiences of artists who have willingly endured arduous times may unfold as seven distinct yet interconnected temporal dimensions.

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