Koo Jiyoon, Sinking Ship, 2011, Oil on linen, 20 x 25.5 cm © Koo Jiyoon

This exhibition consists of “completed” or “successful” paintings alongside installation works made from “unfinished” or “failed” paintings that have never been shown—or could never be shown—as well as performance videos documenting the process of making the works.

Although these works appear to stand in opposition to one another, each functions as an independent artwork while remaining thoroughly dependent on the others.


Koo Jiyoon, Bonfire, 2009, Oil on canvas, 30 x 40 cm © Koo Jiyoon

When describing herself in relation to her practice, the artist speaks of two identities. One is the painter—the producer of images or, quite literally, illusions. The other is the person who proposes ways of seeing the events that occur throughout the process. These two identities continuously influence one another.

Images from previously completed works may be reused as material for the 'Folding Paintings' series, while drawings scanned for presentation on the web may unexpectedly generate afterimages whose patterns later reappear as abstract images on canvas.

Through the repetition of such processes, the artist no longer remains solely within the role of “painter.” Instead, all elements generated during the making of a work come to occupy equal positions, capable of being exchanged with one another.

The artist argues that producing images with specific subjects and intentions through the language of painting is only one among countless possible approaches to painting. Through this exhibition, she seeks to demonstrate that a painting is not a dependent object preserved in a museum under carefully controlled conditions of light, temperature, and humidity, but rather a living organism that can continually change and transform.

100 Folding Paintings will take on a different appearance each day throughout the exhibition, and some visitors may even encounter the artist in the gallery, folding paintings as part of the ongoing process.

References