Installation view of 《Time Touch: Changing Landscapes》 © Wooran Foundation

The exhibition 《Time Touch: Changing Landscapes》 was organized to commemorate the 10th anniversary of the Wooran Foundation and to reflect on landscapes of the past and present.
 
The Korean proverb “Ten years is enough to change mountains and rivers” conveys the idea that everything changes with the passage of time. The number “ten” suggests completion and fullness, yet it also marks a point of renewal and transformation. The term “mountains and rivers” symbolizes the living environment closely tied to human life, and within the history of East Asian painting it has often been treated as a subject through which the self is contemplated.


Installation view of 《Time Touch: Changing Landscapes》 © Wooran Foundation

In the past, literati often chose to retreat into the mountains when they wished to escape worldly pressures such as wealth and fame. In the mountains they sought spiritual freedom, and this spirit was preserved through landscape paintings that continue to be appreciated today. By viewing these works, we can infer the mental landscapes and ideals of the people who lived in those times. For this reason, paintings that depict “mountains and rivers” are not merely representations of natural scenery; they connect reality and ideals and construct a visual world that shapes the landscape of life.
 
Today we live within landscapes where nature and cities are interwoven, and we experience scenery through various media. Do we still seek spiritual freedom when we look at nature? As landscapes have changed, has the mindset through which we perceive them also changed? Now that rivers and mountains have transformed many times with the passage of time, it may be necessary to pause and reconsider the landscapes of the past and the present, paying attention to changes we may not have previously noticed.


Installation view of 《Time Touch: Changing Landscapes》 © Wooran Foundation

《Time Touch: Changing Landscapes》 introduces artists whose works resonate closely with the landscapes of life.
 
The exhibition features modern masters of Korean landscape painting, Sangbeom Lee and Gwansik Byun; national intangible cultural heritage masters Geunbok Lee and Changdae Kim, who preserve the tradition of Korean tiled roofs that metaphorically evoke mountain ridges; photographer Chunho Won, who captures the beauty of roof tiles; ceramic artists Jaehyo Jung and Jongrye Hwang, who translate the vitality of landscapes into ceramics; and contemporary artists Sejin Kwon, Boyong Kim, Jiwoo Seo, Hyuk Lee, and Pia Mannikko, who explore the imagery of landscapes across different times and spaces. By observing the landscapes these artists portray and the sensibilities embedded in their perspectives, viewers may experience more vividly both the landscapes of the past and those we encounter today.
 
The Wooran Foundation hopes that while spending time in the Wooran 1Gyeong space—divided into sections titled “Mountain” and “Water”—visitors will contemplate the various landscapes surrounding them, viewing them from afar or up close, lingering calmly or in fleeting moments, and ultimately discovering the scenes that move their own hearts.

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