Installation view of 《CHUCK》 © Artspace Hue

Changchang Yoo explores a new painterly language that traverses various fields of visual art, including comics, painting, and illustration. Much like drawing a comic, he develops narratives through the process of discovering forms within paint that has been accidentally applied to the canvas. His works are created through the repeated act of finding suggestive forms within paint that has flowed and spread by chance, then painting new forms that emerge through further association.

‘CHUCK’ is a fictional character that reveals one aspect of our lives. Herds of animals frequently appear in Changchang Yoo’s works, either moving in a single direction or being swept away within waterfalls. These scenes metaphorically represent our lives, helplessly carried along by the larger currents of society. The artist observes and orchestrates such situations while constructing narratives, and in one corner of the work there often appears a figure named ‘Chuck.’

Chuck is a character who pretends to understand all of these currents, precariously clinging to the edge of an overwhelming flow. Believing himself to know everything, Chuck leaps into the painting and becomes entangled within the massive current. As Chuck appears within the works, each piece comes to contain a narrative like an individual frame of a comic, while the body of works as a whole forms a larger story open to each viewer’s interpretation. The vivid contrasts of primary colors and the comic-style lines move fluidly between painting and comics, adding a fresh sense of playfulness.

Changchang Yoo compares his artistic process to “playing baduk alone.” Unlike baduk, which requires two players competing against one another, the artist confronts the canvas alone. His working process resembles the way one stone determines the placement of the next, gradually forming territories on the baduk board. Just as new stones are placed upon the board, the artist layers forms and colors onto the surface. Each time his brush touches the canvas, new figures emerge, turning the work itself into an endlessly open process.

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