Installation view of 《Color, Play a Trick on Emotion》 © Ilwoo space

Ilwoo Space (一宇SPACE), located in the lobby on the first floor of the Korean Air Seosomun Building, presents the exhibition 《Color, Play a Trick on Emotion》 in the summer of 2013. Running for ninety days from July 11 to October 9, this curated group exhibition focuses on five artists—Kim Tschoon Su, Nam Tchun Mo, Oh Byungwook, Lee Inhyeon, and Jang SeungTaik—through the conceptual lens of “color.” The varied expressions of color articulated by each artist generate a vibrant “play of light” within the exhibition space, stimulating the viewer’s sensibility.

Color exists in all objects that surround us. From cups, slippers, and chairs inside the home to flowers, trees, and the sky outside, color permeates every aspect of daily life. As a fragment of light, color carries its own vibration, and that vibration evokes distinct sensations and emotions in human perception. Color has long been regarded as one of the fundamental elements of art, and its role has been explored in diverse ways throughout art history.

Wassily Kandinsky, a pioneer of abstract painting, believed that color in non-representational art could express the inner life of humanity and produce an emotional resonance comparable to music. Likewise, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, whose Theory of Colours profoundly influenced twentieth-century artists, drew attention to the subjective and emotional impact of color on human psychology.

《Color, Play a Trick on Emotion》 centers on the image of color as an active agent capable of stimulating the viewer’s emotional response. Through color as a mediating device, the exhibition seeks to initiate a subtle and intimate dialogue between artist and audience. In the heat of summer, one viewer may sense the cool expanse of the sea when encountering a canvas filled with blue, while another may perceive the clarity of an open sky.

The colors that saturate the exhibition space are expected to evoke a spectrum of emotions, offering both repose and renewed vitality. At the same time, the exhibition provides an opportunity to consider how each of the five artists interprets “color” and articulates it through distinct contemporary sensibilities.

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