Poster image of 《Not Dream, Soul, or Art》 © Art Project CO

Art Project CO (CEO Eun-Hye Lim) is hosting 《Not Dream, Soul, or Art》, an exhibition featuring the participation of two artists, 'Lee In-Hyeon and Park Ki-Won', whose work is both elegant and quirky, academic yet innovative, different yet similar. The exhibition’s title 'Not Dream, Soul, or Art' is a play on the rhyme of IU’s song 'Not Spring, Love, or Cherry Blossom'. While IU's song is a seasonal track themed around spring, the title of this exhibition employs an opposing antithesis, focusing on a dialogue that goes beyond the essence.

In their previous exhibitions, the dialectical dialogue between two seemingly similar but distinct artists revealed different facets of their work. Their interactions deviate from conventional painting theories, as seen in Lee In Hyeon’s (1958~) expansion theory, which approaches the structural essence of painting through a shift in 'frames.' Similarly, Park Ki Won’s (1964~) theory of essence is evident in the transformation of painting-installation-objects, reducing them to their minimal units.

What if we replace the rhyme of the exhibition 《Not Dream, Soul, or Art》 with 《Not Layers, Depth, or Art》? In the explosive interplay of ideas where a two-person show connects as one shared understanding, we will encounter the expansion of an 'exhibition concept' that unfolds like cell division, constantly renewing itself.


Lee Inhyeon, L'épistémè of Painting - Amazing Multiverse #A2-F2, 2023, Oil on canvas, 80 x 120 x 10 cm © Lee Inhyeon

LEE IN HYEON: There is no hierarchy in the multiple selves.

Lee In Hyeon presents the series ‘L'épistémè of Painting’, which extends the thickness of the canvas. If we define Lee In Hyeon’s canvas as ‘the promotion of the side = the dissolution of succession through the subversion of the boundary,’ then all surfaces of the canvas can be considered equal within the same hierarchy. The evolved aspect of painting’s regenerative nature advances in the series ‘L'épistémè of Painting - Amazing Multiverse’. The identical bar-shaped canvases placed on the floor, like the moon reflected in clear water, represent a 'union of similar but different layers,' linking circles and the virtual like twins.

Viewers who alternate between looking from the left and right or from the front and side can only discern what comes first and what comes next through subtle intuition and observation. Points that are like twins born from a single entity, the artist’s intention is to deliberately reveal variations in intensity and subtlety of size reveal the 21st-century zeitgeist, which swims between main and secondary characters, encapsulated in a 'playful enigma.

PARK KI WON: Width is the Embodiment of Imaginative Cognition

In the ‘Width’ series, PARK KI WON presents a dialogue between lines intended to perceive width. The paintings, which minimize material texture and feature lines of oil stick floating on the canvas, appear as color blocks from a distance. This reflects a method of perceiving formless matter. The sequential numbers 44, 106 through 114, attached to the term ‘width’ in the flat works, and the countless diagonal lines evoke a range of imaginations. The artist’s intention is to express a ‘pervasive necessity, like air, that is always there.’

Through the ‘middle path of permeating lines’ that support each other, the work demonstrates a ‘relationally balanced energy’ that is not self-serving. Many believe that PARK KI WON is admired by other artists because he pursues a ‘balanced air’ that can blend into any context.

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