Installation view of 《Void in Korean Art》 © Leeum

Leeum, Samsung Museum of Art holds unique collections of traditional Korean art and modern-contemporary art. Organized in celebration of the third anniversary of the opening of Leeum, 《Void in Korean Art》 takes full advantage of these unique collections.

The exhibition ambitiously encompasses a broad range of works of art and objects from many genres of visual arts - from Gaya-period archaeological artifacts, to Goryeo celadons and Joseon white porcelains, to calligraphies and folk paintings, to modern and contemporary art works, photography and moving images. In an effort to examine the subject from a more multi-dimensional way, the exhibition in organized also around three subthemes of "Discover of Void, Nature," "Freedom, Void but Fullness," and "Void, a Passage to Imagination."

The first part, nature, which is also an introduction, focuses on how void in traditional East Asian painting is not simply an artistic problem but rather reflects the philosophy and aesthetic of East Asia. The second section demonstrates the ways in which this philosophy of respect for nature is realized as manifestations of an artistic spirit seeking the freedom of letting nature be as it is and unifying the self with things in nature. In the last chapter the exhibition emphasizes how such spaces of void and emptiness produce artistic tensions in works of art as well as open up active passages of communication with the outside world by means of the power of imagination.

Here, "void" is a core term, which encompasses Asian values that contrast with the logocentrism and materialism of Western philosophy. It also signifies a world, which is empty yet also filled with elegance and compels viewers to see the horizon of life anew, and at the same time, a productive space that traverses boundaries and differences. Void in Korean Art hopes to be not only a chance to examine not only the artistic but also the spiritual significance of void in Korean art.

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