Lee Gapchul, Silent Landscape-City of Symptoms ©Lee Gapchul

MoPS Museum Hanmi Samcheong Annex presents Lee Gapchul’s new exhibition 《Silent Mountains–City of Symptoms》 as its inaugural exhibition. The show consists of 26 urban photographs taken by Lee, who has established his identity over the past thirty years as a subjective documentary photographer through representative works such as ‘Land of Others’, ‘Conflict and Reaction’, and ‘Energy’.

This exhibition commemorates the publication of Lee Gapchul’s photobook, jointly published by the Italian publisher Damiani Editore and Museum Hanmi. As with his earlier works, Lee’s distinctive photographic grammar—off-frame compositions and defocused subjects—stands out in this urban series.

Yet what draws the eye most is not the urban subjects filling the frame, but the “dark margins” of the photograph. Lee refers to this as yeoheuk, a space filled with invisible signs suggesting that something is about to occur. As Lee has said, “I photograph light in order to see darkness.” His work thus focuses on the city’s margins—spaces of darkness where light does not reach.


Lee Gapchul, Silent Landscape-City of Symptoms ©Lee Gapchul

For this exhibition, Lee printed film shot over more than ten years in both natural and urban settings. He captured “stillness and extinction” that transcend all noise within nature, and discerned “solitude and silence” embedded even within the city’s chaotic clamor. For Lee, mountains are a transcendent realm beyond the secular, and cities are a transcendent realm within it. This is why he bound these seemingly opposing spaces under the single title ‘Silent Mountains’. This exhibition presents the urban component of the series, 《Silent Mountains–City of Symptoms》.

It runs from November 8, 2019, to January 15, 2020. An opening reception and publication celebration were held on November 15 at 5 p.m., followed by an artist talk and book signing on November 30 at noon. The artist talk took the form of a conversation between Lee Gapchul and Song Sujeong, Head of the Research, Planning, and Publishing Team at the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, who also contributed to the photobook.

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