Ha
Ji-hoon builds layers of paint as if sculpting, reconstructing the landscape in
a vague memory into the image of a mysterious, bizarre stone. He has
experienced many cities due to frequent migration since his childhood. For him,
the landscape has been an eternal and ever-changing theme. Ha painstakingly
designates the colors and positions to build a sense of the scenery in his
childhood as a whole, and then paints with his hands without a brush or tools.
His surrealistic masses, which seem to glow quietly in the thick darkness, can
be said to be the result of condensing various synesthetic impressions received
from past landscapes into a single image.
Seong
Joon Hong explores the infinite possibilities of painting by varying the
traditional methodology of painting, material properties, and representation.
He divides the exclusive landscape images taken by himself into individual
layers and draws them as if overlapping them with the other layers of
color-field. The elaborately crafted realm of representation and the layers of
the color-field that offset it collide within one screen, summoning
simultaneously reality and illusion. Hong does not annotate his work, and
advances without guidance, fueled by his curiosity and affection for the medium
of painting.
The
title of the exhibition, “PARAXIS,” is an optical term meaning a virtual space
between the lens and the target where nothing exists. In this space, numerous
lights that deviate by a slight difference spread, besides the single ray of
light passing through the lens. Shadows of the real appear like ghosts, but
they are distinctly different from the beings. In other words, it is an
ambiguous place that is closely connected to reality but different from it.
Rosie Jackson, a researcher of fantastic literature, likened this borderline
state of asymptotic axis, which is based on reality but separated from it, to
“a place where fantasy appears.”
According to her, in this place, the concealed
things are exposed, and the collision with reality causes unfamiliar and
heterogeneous inspiration, overturning the existing rules and opening the
perspective. The artworks of this exhibition also depict the real and the
unreal, as well as shapes placed in unclear positions floating between the
external and internal worlds. The exhibition 《PARAXIS》 crosses and penetrates the boundary
between the fantasy and reality to bring the “hidden world” here and now.
Through this, it will allow viewers to escape from the old existence and
freshly realize the world.