Poster image of 《Selected Young JEONBUK Artists 2022》 © JMA

Initiated in 2015 and now in its eighth year, 《Selected Young JEONBUK Artists 2022》 is an exhibition that provides a platform for emerging artists from the Jeonbuk region to engage with diverse social issues of contemporary art and to develop new aesthetic modes of thinking. Each year, approximately three artists are selected and offered opportunities for new commissions and exhibitions, thereby introducing fresh perspectives and fostering new discourses within the regional art scene.

From the 29 applicants who responded to the open call at the end of August last year, Seo Suin, Shin Youngjin, and Miryu Yoon were selected as this year’s Jeonbuk Young Artists through a review process involving art critics and other professionals. All three, working primarily in painting, have garnered attention for their distinctive formal languages and their focused articulation of specific thematic concerns. They were provided with material support for production, one-on-one mentorship with art critics, and opportunities to exhibit at the Jeonbuk Museum of Art Seoul Space (Seoul Branch) as well as the main museum.

Installation view of 《Selected Young JEONBUK Artists 2022》 © JMA

At first glance, Seo Suin’s works appear to adopt traditional pictorial formats such as still life and landscape. However, they are characterized by a painterly reconstruction of images drawn from worn memories collected in everyday life, including the motel “Gadamjang,” where the artist spent her childhood. These images are allowed to drip across the surface or are thickly layered with a knife, creating a distinct formal language. Moving beyond the mere representation of fixed forms, the works reveal traces of an attempt to coexist with time—exploring and attending to the mysterious interstices within processes of aging, disappearance, and the passage of time.

Shin Youngjin, whose practice engages with widely circulated contemporary social issues, appropriates colloquial language from everyday life to present his unique perspective on the shifting realities of the present, where once firmly held beliefs begin to waver. Through installations and video works addressing topics such as pandemic-era capital and social concerns, alongside paintings that offer consolation to those in hardship, the artist invites viewers to reflect on what is often overlooked in the routines of daily life.

In the figurative paintings of Miryu Yoon, while specific subjects and situations are present, what stands out is her sustained attention to capturing fleeting impressions—moments in which changing light interacts with surfaces of varying textures, producing transient sensations and atmospheres encountered in the act of seeing. This tendency recalls aspects of Impressionist painting. Furthermore, rather than presenting a single, autonomous canvas, her works often juxtapose multiple scenes across sequences, enabling a comparative reading of images. Through this approach, her practice reveals a mode of painting that is at once highly sensorial and phenomenological.

References