Min Jungyeon, Les pieds en l’air, 2012, Indian ink and coloured pencil on paper, 32.6 x 32.6 cm © Min Jungyeon

The limit between reality and fiction is useless because you can actually fully live in an unreal world.
- Min Jung-Yeon interviewed by Olivia Sand, Asian Art, 2012

During a trip, Min Jung-Yeon found herself in Madrid’s central station where she discovered a big greenhouse. She was overcome with a desire to penetrate inside it, to pursue her journey there rather than getting back on the train. The discovery of a botanical oasis at an architectural junction of man’s movements significantly marked the artist.

Later, it inspired the painting Madrid Station (La Gare de Madrid), an emblematic work, where the organic, dream-like “jungle” is juxtaposed with realist, figurative elements in a multiple plane composition.


Min Jungyeon, Gare de Madrid, 2010, Acrylic on canvas, 150 x 200 cm © Min Jungyeon

The accumulation of impressions is permanent in all beings. Hand in hand with the act of forgetting, only the essence remains, what is essential — a souvenir. Min transforms her experiences and emotions in order to go from the personal, the individual to the more universal.

In her world, order doesn’t exist, there are no limits: time, space and matter are created, modified and move in an incessant process, a perpetual movement between past and present, visible and invisible, fiction and reality, structure and form, rational and irrational.


Memory from a greenhouse

Playing on the double meaning of the word “mémoire”, memory in French — meaning either a souvenir or an extended academic dissertation which questions and makes observations — Min draws-up an inventory of her own, personal greenhouse with its specimen and phenomena.

Spaces fluctuate, are autonomous and artificial, a reminder of the virtual video game universe which is an integral part of the artists’ reality and generation: straight lines and geometric forms are combined with fluid lines to create encounters, confrontations, separations or destructions in a repeating New Game!

The artist conjures feminine forms embodying softness and masculine structures which are carriers of energy. These opposing yet complementary forces are fundamental to Min’s unusual world. Unusual yet not surreal, despite the formal resemblance to the Surrealist movement, the artist does not aim to transcribe the unconscious.

Images come from her imagination as well as the objective study of reality. Min aims rather to reveal the complexity of our world, to enlarge our field of perception and perhaps, our idea of beauty.


Media

Different in their expressive form, Min attaches equal importance to drawing and painting. For her, drawing is like breathing. It allows her significant psychological freedom and greater spontaneity in its creative process. The artist plots minutely in Indian ink using a very fine ink pen. Few colours, in watercolour or pencil occasionally enhance her compositions. These can be distinguished due to their precision and graphical purity.

Only the predetermined number of minute strokes in each zone, following a personal logic, represents a form of constraint. Inversely, Min’s acrylic compositions require further rigor and a deeper reflection leaving less room for improvisation. They do however offer greater physical freedom with the possibility of wider movements as well as the enjoyment of colour.

References