Installation view of 《SUITE》 (G Gallery, 2022) © Lee Mijung

G Gallery will present Lee Mijung’s solo exhibition 《SUITE》 from August 31 to September 24. In this exhibition, Lee Mijung presents her new ‘Striking feature(s)’ series.

As suggested by the title, meaning “striking facial feature(s),” she gives form to the components of the face through various formats such as banners and wood pieces, based on vector drawings composed of short, thick lines, while questioning the standards of “beauty” accepted in the contemporary moment.

Lee Mijung has continued to analyze and recombine the visual elements that surround our lives, constructing painterly planes on birch panels. A representative example is her solo exhibition 《Sandwich Times》(SONGEUN ArtCube, 2020), in which she presented works that borrowed prominent forms and images from the walls, furniture, and objects that make up contemporary interior design, translating the functions of objects and design elements revealed through their materiality into her own sculptural language.

Lee Mijung has also continued her interest in the human body that decorates the home and uses objects as part of the context of her practice. One example is Take the same pose(2017), which was completed by painting on boards diagrammatically shaped to emphasize the function of legs and then assembling them three-dimensionally.

Another reference is Combination Body ((effect))(2019), in which the brain, teeth, and other body parts are juxtaposed with parts of D.I.Y. furniture, visualizing parts of the body as independent entities with their own functions. In this way, Lee Mijung has steadily presented works centered on making everyday visual and aesthetic elements into painterly planes and “assembling them three-dimensionally.”

At the same time, the artist has shown a number of works that present the components of a work arranged flatly, leading viewers to visually perceive the flat pieces and then combine them in their minds—that is, works that guide spatial-perceptual imagination—continuing her exploration of the various possibilities of “combination.”

The title of this exhibition is “suite.” Suite is a word that refers to a suite room composed of several rooms, a furniture set, or a symphony, meaning that multiple components form a single whole, namely a “suite.”

Lee Mijung’s new ‘Striking feature(s)’ series, presented in this exhibition, is composed of works such as the wall-sheet drawing Striking feature(s)_wall drawing installed in the indoor exhibition space, wood pieces such as Striking feature(s)_eye_01, and twelve banner works, Striking feature(s)_public banner, hung at regular intervals along a main road. Together, the works as a whole form one 《SUITE》.


Lee Mijung, Striking feature(s)_SUITE_01-01_w.d, 2022, Acrylic on canvas mounted on birch plywood, adhesive vinyl, 134.5x255.5cm © Lee Mijung

The method of producing the works also explains the exhibition title. Based on vector drawing, Lee Mijung encompasses the variations generated by combination and joining within the ‘Striking feature(s)’ series, creating a suite. To explain more closely, as mentioned in the flow of Lee Mijung’s previous works, she forms a single work through the combination of its components.

She also overlaps individual works to transform two different works into one suite. This can be seen in the format in which a physical layer is applied to the wall-sheet drawing and wood pieces are overlaid onto it.

The “face” is also a suite in which the components called facial features create a single unified form. In this exhibition, Lee Mijung brings her sculptural language and her interest in everyday images to the face. Recently, our faces are reflected through the devices in our hands as flat and partial images floating about. Smart devices, through the process of image processing, make images appear flatly and fragmentarily.

Referring to her own visual-perceptual sense, which has become accustomed to facial components appearing close-up or distorted through devices, Lee Mijung observes the aesthetic standards that are accepted and agreed upon in the contemporary moment.

She detours around generally accepted aesthetic standards by keeping or recombining anonymous images of facial features circulating online—for example, images of large eyes, curved noses, and angular jaws—within thick lines.

The vector drawing, which serves as the basis for this series and is also a work in itself, uses irregular short strokes as drawing lines for the components of the face, containing within thick lines the distinct appearances embedded in each image of a facial part. In the wood pieces and banner works, simplified colors are inserted into the pupils, skin, hair, and other parts, dividing the flat space and making the facial features stand out.

The viewpoints are varied. Three-dimensional facial components seen from multiple angles are freely joined together on a flat surface without distinction between frontal and side views.

Between these facial features expressed in this way, Lee Mijung places “beauty tools” such as makeup brushes, puffs, and cotton swabs, connecting face to face and unfolding facial features from multiple angles into a single image. The “image of myself” floating outside the physical “me” passes through the artist’s arbitrary choices and sculptural translation, emerging as one “figure” with a collective face that fills an enormous wall.

Within this figure, people cross paths, encounter one another, and lean on one another. Looking at 《SUITE》, we may come to hold a new attitude toward the things that constitute ourselves.

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