Kim Jipyeong, Birdblossom, 2012 © Kim Jipyeong

Gana Art presents a solo exhibition by Kim Jipyeong (Kim Jihye, b.1976–), an artist who has gained recognition for reinterpreting traditional Joseon-era genres such as chaekgado (scholar’s shelves), flower-and-bird paintings, and landscape paintings in a contemporary manner.

Kim Jipyeong combines chaekgado, which symbolizes the culture of the scholar-official class, with everyday objects circulating in modern society, transforming them into “contemporary still lifes” filled with the vibrant colors of the five cardinal hues (obangsaek) and playful, dynamic energy.

Furthermore, by depicting ‘camouflage landscapes’ (michae sansu), which present disguised landscapes rather than the stable compositions of traditional landscape painting, the artist has rearticulated traditional Korean imagery and concepts through a contemporary sensibility and aesthetic.
 
In this solo exhibition, viewers can more actively observe the creative experiments the artist has pursued at the boundary between tradition and modernity. Three years ago, Kim participated in illustrating the picture book The Piano That Doesn’t Sing by world-renowned cellist Chung Myung-wha, creating works that allowed children to approach the meaning and value of music in a more accessible and emotional way.

As an extension of this trajectory, historical paintings recently created for a film will also be presented in the exhibition ahead of its release. Through this exhibition, audiences will be able to explore a range of works that produce a distinctive and contemporary form of landscape, in which traditional ideal landscapes and present-day “true views” intersect across time.

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