Park Kyung Ryul, A Meeting Place, 2017, Oil on canvas, oil on paper, oil on rolled canvas, wrapped painting, glazed ceramic, wood, sponge, plaster, paper tape, orange, acrylic tube, clay, toy, wooden frame, Dimensions variable © Park Kyung Ryul

Park Kyung Ryul assembles different image symbols into a collage on one screen and then explores the realm of unconsciousness through the narratives formed by these symbols on the screen. However, as Park experienced the gap between the artist’s intent and the public’s acceptance of the narratives, she came to focus more on the structure that determines the narrative, rather than the narrative itself.

The experiment of shedding the conventional form of painting, culminates into the artist’s unique style of “sculptural painting”, which aims to expand the two-dimensional painting into the realm of three dimensions, leading Park to ask a fundamental question on what should be demonstrated by art through this novel experiment.


Park Kyung Ryul, A Pretty Face, 2018, Oil on canvas, oil on paper, wrapped painting, glazed ceramic, plaster, paper tape, orange, plinth, spray on thread, clay, wooden stick, Dimensions variable © Park Kyung Ryul

During this exhibition, Park showcases three sculptural paintings, including the old and the new ones, of the ‘On Evenness’, which have been in progress for the past few years. These works have successfully expanded the realm of painting into that of installations.

Sculptural painting refers to the artist’s way of producing a painting during which unintended narratives are produced as a result of the composition and arrays intuitively created by the external factors such as the position and composition of images and the type of frame, etc.

First of all, all the elements in the images of the artist, including specific geometries or intuitive brush strokes, serve as each and every object placed in different parts of the two-dimensional planes. And, as they get together to create one picture(canvas), this in itself becomes another object to be placed in a three-dimensional space with other objects like ceramics, wooden pieces, fruits, cotton cloths, or plasters to form specific arrays.

Small and big paintings placed together with various objects will add the last impromptu work on site before final completion. The narrative, which has been expanded from painting installation following two rounds of placements and configurations, is no longer a means to deliver the message or the story created by the objects in the painting but a tool to question the visitors’ conventional “way of reading.”


Park Kyung Ryul, Not Titled Yet, 2018, Oil on canvas, oil on paper, glazed ceramic, Dimensions variable © Park Kyung Ryul

A Meeting Place (2017)adopts a holistic approach in illustrating the structure of a painting. The title suggests a place where all acts related with watching a painting take place: that is, a place where the paintings are hung, objects are placed, visitors read the work titles and infer the narratives of a work.

A Pretty Face (2018)and Not Titled Yet (2018)are somewhat subordinated to A Meeting Place, whose experiment focuses on narratives that are inherently produced due to external elements unintended by the artist.

The title Not Titled Yet describes a narrative in an incomplete state, not yet finalized, which is in stark contrast with the apparent title of A Pretty Face. As such, the artist uses an abstract and morose title like Not Titled Yet and a specific and evident title like A Pretty Face to make observations on how an installation of a similar nature can be perceived differently depending on the title.

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