Exhibitions
《Faint Afterglow》, 2023.01.11 – 2023.02.18, Gallery Baton
January 10, 2023
Gallery Baton
Installation
view of 《Faint Afterglow》 © Gallery Baton
Gallery
Baton presents 《Faint Afterglow》, a group exhibition of works by 9 artists from the Korea and
abroad from 11th January to 18th February 2023 in Hannam-dong, Seoul.
The
primary value of works that artists produce is related to self-introspection
regardless of how they appear. It can be intense visual recollections stemming
from past experiences, a manifestation of particular emotions grown over a long
time, or associations with lifestyles of the society where the artists belong.
“Creation” begins when the artists separate themselves from these personal
memories and experiences and select what they ultimately intend to describe.
Thus, it is declaring who they are by revealing what kinds of subjects remain
in their mind and how intuition for an act of creating triggers certain
sentiments to stand out.
In
this process, illuminating the substantial truth is not necessarily crucial.
What actually matters are how the specific events are imprinted and renewed
internally and how they turn into artworks at the end. Appreciating artworks is
an extraordinary behavior in which spectators indirectly experience what the
artists have gone through from their unique perspective.
As master directors,
who have established their own manner of filmmaking, manage to alter their
insight into fluent cinematography through directions; art practice is also an
outcome of sophisticated directions unveiling the origins of aesthetics with
artists’ authentic language and techniques.
Installation
view of 《Faint Afterglow》 © Gallery Baton
The
exhibition unfolds a field to explore a source of the artists’ innermost
remembrances and experiences in the selected works. Although the initial
motives and subjects for their creation might have faded over time, the
artists’ imagination is either a new truth narrowing the niche or a window
letting them encounter who they are.
The exhibition space, where videos,
sculptures, paintings, installations and photography coexist, functions as a
microcosm which condenses uncertainty and turbulence of life and human
consciousness. Consequently, it will provide an opportunity to seek out the
beginning of profound emotions and experiences which shift into various
outstanding visual achievements.
The
close-up scene of the Sun, a NASA satellite recorded, is projected onto a
large-scale screen on a loop in Blue Baton, a separate exhibition space. At the
same time, a black and white photograph by Chung Heeseung, an ice sculpture by
Bae YoonHwan and paintings by Suzanne Song and Lee Jaeseok occupy the given
expanse at a regular distance.
This space is an intriguing example of
experimenting with the possibility of delivering a sense of contemporary,
regarded as a sufficient condition for the current art world, achieved by a
curation rather than each piece of work. Each work, the outcome of the
individual creating motive independent of a specific theme, constructs a
parallel yet loosely intertwined semantic dynamics encompassing the video as a
central figure to simulate secondary aspects of global warming, one of the most
internationally significant environmental issues.