Exhibitions
《Captured Moments》, 2022.10.07 – 2022.10.29, Gallery Kabinett
October 05, 2022
Gallery Kabinett
Installation view of 《Captured Moments》 © Gallery Kabinett
Gallery Kabinett presents a group exhibition titled 《Captured Moments》 for three weeks, from Friday, October 7 to Saturday, October 29. The act of capturing fleeting moments—freezing the experience and emotion of an instant into memory—plays a crucial role for artists who continue their practice within the realm of art. This sensibility of capturing moments unfolds as creative expression through the artist’s thoughts and emotions.
These captured moments, accumulated with dedication and transformed into data, become the foundation of artistic work. Through processes of visualization, editing, and reconstruction, they are realized as artworks. As we experience the newly created worlds of the artists through their works, the beauty interpreted by them continually offers new experiences and impressions.
In this exhibition, viewers encounter works by Donghae Kim, Heewon Oh, Hyangro Yoon, and Eunhye Choi, who attempt to create through the act of capturing moments. It invites reflection on what kinds of moments served as sources of inspiration and what kinds of instances captured the artists’ attention and thought.
Installation view of 《Captured Moments》 © Gallery Kabinett
Donghae Kim’s work begins with walking through nature, encountering landscapes, and breathing with nature in his own way. Through this engagement with nature, the artist recalls the connection between his senses and his mind, and translates this awareness into sculptural forms derived from memory. In this exhibition, sculptures composed of thin linear and planar materials extend from branches within a framed structure, swaying and shimmering with the flow of air to create a musical effect. The frame signifies the domain of memory—captured fragments of natural scenery.
Heewon Oh continues her ‘Dispersion (blooming)’ series, recording the presence of floating light through gradients of oil-based colored pencil on canvas, where fine silver powder particles shimmer in response to the viewer’s movement. Through various experiences of light—diffusion, reflection, and variation—scattered movements of invisible particles like dust unfold and disperse in the air.
The incidental clusters of light create a dynamic rhythm, leading viewers into scenes that appear both real and unreal. In this exhibition, she explores a variation of her previous works under the title Dispersion (AU): Another Universe, revealing her considerations of contrasting concepts against a silver-powder base, and observing light that exists more dryly and clearly within darkness.
Installation view of 《Captured Moments》 © Gallery Kabinett
Hyangro Yoon captures pre-existing images drawn from animation, books, and sketches, and reconstructs them through digital editing techniques and graphic programs. These captured images are reorganized by the artist, printed digitally onto canvas, and then painted with an airbrush. She refers to her work as “quasi-painting” because she transforms and internalizes these “found images.”
The exhibition presents recent works from her ‘Screenshot’ series, which she has been developing since 2016. By enlarging specific moments—often climactic scenes filled with energy as animated characters transform—she translates narrative movement into abstract painting, shifting from immaterial to material, and from virtual worlds to physical reality, exploring the relationships and combinations between different dimensions.
In the intermediate space between experience and memory, the scenes perceived by artist Eunhye Choi are rendered in desaturated pastel tones. These colors are derived from her observations of changing light and skies seen through airplane windows during travel. Based on color-driven memory, she constructs layered images of these transitional scenes.
Her work visualizes movement between the fleeting and the tangible, focusing particularly on the immaterial energy that arises in between—organic motions that create continuous interaction between two worlds. Through the mediation of light and shadow that shift organically over time, she reflects on the relationship between the visible and the invisible.