Choi Jeonghwa, Mandala of Flowers, 2014 © Choi Jeonghwa

Ordinary plastic lids are transformed into artworks. PET bottle caps, side-dish container lids, dehumidifier lids… unattractive piles of plastic that could be thrown away at any moment become vividly colored flowers through the artist’s touch. The flower-garden-like piece is titled Mandala of Flowers. Installation artist Choi Jeonghwa (53), who works with plastic items and cheap everyday goods, is this time attempting a collaboration with the public.
 
Ahead of the exhibition 《Choi Jeonghwa – Total Chromatic Spectrum》 (until October 19), opening September 4 at the former Seoul Station building ‘Culture Station Seoul 284,’ Choi will run a ‘Let’s Gather! Plastic Lids’ campaign to create a large installation together with ordinary participants.
 
Choi is the artist who stacked plastic baskets like walls or towers on the Korean Pavilion at the 2005 Venice Biennale and on the rooftop of the former Defense Security Command building (now the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Seoul) in 2009. Through exhibitions in Korea and abroad, including international biennales, he has experimented with all kinds of everyday items such as scrubbing towels, balloons, and plastic bags.

He installed a gigantic artificial flower in outdoor spaces like San Francisco Civic Center Plaza, wrapped building exteriors in primary-colored fabric, and piled up plastic containers of every sort. Sieves, shopping baskets, dusters, beverage bottles, detergent containers, and medicine bottles—everyday objects of different sizes, shapes, and colors—have all been transformed into materials for contemporary art.
 
The “multiple artist” will turn the high-ceilinged central hall beneath the domed roof of the old Seoul Station building into his characteristic “flower field.” In the former Western-style restaurant space—a two-story interior measuring 20.6 by 12.3 meters—he will create a massive flower made of plastic lids.
 
Exhibition director Min Byeongjik, who is organizing the campaign to collect about 300,000 lids for Mandala of Flowers, explained, “Along with Choi’s works, this project awakens art not as the artist’s alone but as art of participation and everyday life.” Participants can contribute by mail or on-site installation through the Culture Station Seoul 284 website (http://www.seoul284.org).
 
Various works will be presented across 25 spaces in the former Seoul Station building. Besides plastic containers, crude materials such as artificial flowers and cheer pom-poms, through ‘clustered production,’ reveal aesthetics and imagery different from their original forms and uses. All the works share a strong floral imagery. Cleaning Flower, composed of long stick brooms, mops, and dusters gathered together, and Flower Field – The Alchemy of Flowers, built from stacks of colorful plastic baskets, shine under lighting like crystals, rivaling geometric sculpture or dazzling chandeliers.
 
In addition to new works and pieces from his collection, the artist will present Golden Flower, insured for about 400 million won and borrowed from a Hong Kong company specifically for this ‘flower’ exhibition. Daily of Flowers, consisting of eight seven-meter-tall towers made of plastic baskets installed in the Seoul Station outdoor plaza, will be unveiled on the 15th.

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