Yiji Jeong, Be BeYour Love, 2022, Oil on canvas, 200 x 230 cm © Yiji Jeong

ThisWeekendRoom presents the two-person exhibition 《The Seasons》 featuring Yiji Jeong and Cho Hyo Ri, from April 2 to April 24, 2022. Both artists have replaced ambiguous, indistinct forms with recognizable imagery. While Yiji Jeong translates the units and directions of time into a sequence of fragmented images, carefully weaving them into the framework of a conversation, Cho Hyo Ri focuses on transporting scenes or events encountered in reality into the virtual dimension of painting, thereby constructing unreal, imaginary spaces.

Yiji Jeong's gaze lingers on phenomena that subtly transform within the flow of time, or on fleeting moments that nevertheless leave behind eternal traces. The evening sky, where red and yellow stains slowly spread over the retreating blue; flowers in a vase, once fully bloomed, now bowing their heads and withering away; scars and marks left on bodies and objects by the force applied to them; or the blink of someone standing before us—all these commonly overlooked scenes are suspended as if eternal within her paintings. The visual stimuli she weaves together suddenly awaken dormant nerves deep within the viewer's consciousness, tying them to the surfaces of her works.

Cho Hyo Ri, Overture, 2022, Acrylic, paper on canvas, 225x162cm (each) ©Cho Hyo Ri

Meanwhile, reflective surfaces and structures that distort or penetrate symbols function as portals in Cho Hyo Ri's work, bridging the present with unknown realms. The layered concepts of watermarks and digital layers, which consistently appear throughout her practice, extend beyond the frame of painting, integrating into the structure of the exhibition space and occupying tangible forms such as glass windows and underground passages. Her unfamiliar paintings, amplified from flatness to three-dimensional dimensions, paradoxically evoke the repetitive, déjà vu-like experiences of everyday life.

Though the two artists' works possess distinct textures, they share tributaries of sensitivity, depicting presences that perhaps have not yet been encountered or have already passed by unnoticed. The keyword "seasons," which is also the title of the exhibition, becomes both a symbolic substitute for the intangible concepts the artists address—friendship, loss, encounter, relationships, and healing—and an entrance guiding the audience into a subjective narrative. The sensory indicators collected by today's generation as they pass through time and space will serve as nourishment for shaping the worlds of both artists.

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