Installation view of 《Ultra-Marine》 © Gallery Shilla

Tschoon-su Kim's world of art includes in the early 80s, series in the mid-1980s, series in the 90s, and and series in the 2000s. 

In his photographic work department in the early 1980s, he tried to show a message of independent meaning that the point of view or the way the artist looked at the subject also became a medium of expression. Through the work using the camera, he paid attention to the field of vision while the line was being drawn, rather than having them look at the line expressed in the work as an object. This served as an opportunity to establish the concept of 'incarnation' and to discover the meaning of 'the nature of space' and 'relationship with objects'.

Also, the series in the mid-1980s draws lines that look like windows or window frames on paper and cotton cloth under the theme of 'in-between' between the inside and outside and erases the screen with acrylic paint and ink. It was intended to think of the 'window' as a 'structure' where the mind (inside) and the world (outside) meet and integrate the structural situations of the two into one through the 'method of erasing' the structural difference between the and the .

Kim Tschoon-su's representative work is the series, which has been published since the early 1990s. The series, which contains a paradoxical meaning to express what exists beyond the limits of language that cannot be put into words, began with the realization of the arbitrariness of language and its limits, that is, the 'strangeness of the tongue'. Following the series of ‘Untitled’ and ‘White and Blue’ the artist paid attention to 'movement of the body' in order to find answers to questions about the meaning of 'painting'. Through repetition of the act of applying paint directly on the body and covering it again, rather than using a brush, the artist actually stopped 'painting' something. By matching the body and paint, the paint settles on the canvas as a concrete entity.

'Ultra-Marine', which started about 30 years ago, attracted by 'blue', a Western paint that resembles the feeling of ink with transparent light, has been an indispensable core element in Kim Tschoon-su's art world. 'Ultra-Marine', which is the name of a deep purple-blue mineral pigment and a combination of 'marine' meaning sea and 'ultra' meaning transcendence, was chosen as the title and theme of the work.

He conceptually borrows the witty and speculative elements of multiple meanings of language, questions contemporary art, and has been constantly experimenting and trying to find answers to his own artistry through painting. Kim Tschoon-su seeks to overcome the limits of consciousness through an act of repetition, a thoughtful experiment based on the essence of painting itself.

This exhibition is the sixth exhibition to be held in 14 years since the first solo exhibition with Shilla in 1993 and since 2005. This is a great opportunity to check the sincere concerns and efforts of artist Kim Tschoon-su for decades. I hope to see many.

References