Exhibitions
《Dark Brightness》, 2023.11.04 – 2023.12.16, HIVE Center for Contemporary Art (Beijing)
November 04, 2023
HIVE Center for Contemporary Art (Beijing)

Installation
view of 《Dark Brightness》 © HIVE
Center for Contemporary Art
Hive Center for Contemporary Art is pleased to present the opening
of South Korean artist Minyoung Choi’s latest solo exhibition, 《Dark Brightness》,
featuring 19 of the most recent paintings of the artist. The exhibition will be
open on 4 November at Hive Beijing’s exhibition halls B and C. This show is
curated by Zhao Xiaodan, and will be on view until 16 December.
Born in 1989 in Seoul, South Korea, Minyoung Choi received her MFA
in Painting from Seoul National University and Slade School of Fine Art,
respectively, in 2013 and 2017. She now lives and works in London. Her practice
embraces elements of folklore, mythology, and religious narratives, all of
which manifest themselves in a dreamlike and mesmerising manner in her work.
Through her paintings, the artist addresses a moment in time based on a
distinct from grand narratives, significantly when her personal perceptions are
transformed and arranged by a drapery-like change of light and situations, the
weightlessness and detachment from the here and now are emphasised.
In her
works, Choi often intentionally adopts imagery with powerful symbolic
qualities, such as the hare, lynx, eel, etc., which in established cultural
contexts embodies the human exploration and reverie for the mysterious and
unknown world, serving as an interface into the endless chapters of her
painting world.

Installation
view of 《Dark Brightness》 © HIVE
Center for Contemporary Art
Yuval Harari summarised, “The truly unique trait of Sapiens is our
ability to create and believe fiction.” Choi, who has been immersed in the
world of literature over the years, is well aware of such summarisation. In her
works, she conceals the trace of narrative by accentuating rituals/ceremonial
symbols, especially when introducing the experience of time and space
transition and seasonal changes into her works, thereby embedding the
experience that enhances the fluctuation of the mind into the canvas. Past
memories and present sentiments are intertwined in the seemingly motionless
images.
Minyoung Choi is narrating a story about humans in a circulating
manner, and what it really imparts is not the darkness but the divine
shimmering light emanating from the darkness. If surrealism represents the
fragmentation of consciousness and visual conflict, Minyoung Choi removes the
boundaries of manifold realities by mixing the imagery of human’s collective
experience with dreams. Almost in a symbiotic hypothesis, the artist settles
the anxiety, insecurity, fear, and chaotic feelings in a unique approach and
establishes complex and distant visceral landscapes.