Kim Jipyeong, Sceneries of ‘Gwanseo’_Inpungnu Pavilion, Kanggye, 2014 © Kim Jipyeong

In the spring of 2015, Gallery Art Company GIG, located on Saigil in Bangbae-dong, presents Kim Jipyeong’s solo exhibition 《Pyongan-Do 平安道:圖》, selected through an open call. Kim Jipyeong graduated from the Department of Oriental Painting at Ewha Womans University and completed her master’s degree in Art Education at the Graduate School of Education of the same university.

With experiences at Jangheung Atelier, the International Cité des Arts, and the Ruan Creation Studio, she has steadily built a solid artistic practice. Having held a total of seven solo exhibitions, including at Gana Art Contemporary and Kai’s Gallery in Hong Kong, she presents her eighth solo exhibition this year at Art Company GIG.
 
In addition, Kim Jipyeong is an artist characterized by “stillness within movement” (靜中動), engaging in a wide range of activities beyond exhibitions. Last year, she was invited by the well-known shoe brand VANS to participate in the artist collaboration project “Off the Wall” at its flagship store, and also took part in the art direction of director Park Chan-kyong’s art film MANSHIN: Ten Thousand Spirits.


Kim Jipyeong, Sceneries of ‘Gwanseo’_Yaksan, Yeongbyeon, 2014 © Kim Jipyeong

The artist unfolds this solo exhibition around the theme of Pyeongando, her mother’s hometown. The exhibition develops through a series of paintings based on collected materials—literature, paintings, and maps—set against the backdrop of Pyeongando prior to the division of Korea.

The artist travels through and reflects upon Pyeongando, an unknown space she cannot directly access due to the division, by way of documents and maps. By comparing hard-won historical maps with Google Earth, she studies the terrain, and by moving between the lines and margins of elegant descriptions and intriguing anecdotes about Pyeongando, she imaginatively experiences the sentiments of this long-lost place.

The eight-piece series depicting the famous “Eight Sceneries of Gwanseo” (including Inpungnu Pavilion in Kanggye, Tonggunjeong Pavilion in Uiju, Dongnim Falls in Seoncheon, Baeksangnu Pavilion in Anju, Yeongwangjeong Pavilion in Pyongyang, Gangseollu Pavilion in Seongcheon, Segeomjeong Pavilion in Manpo, and Yaksan Dongdae in Yeongbyeon) constitutes the key works of the exhibition. Through this exhibition, the artist seeks to present Pyeongando not merely as a battleground marked by tragic history, but as a space freed from unstable regional identities.
 
Kim Jipyeong explores traditional Korean culture and philosophical subjects, devoting her energy to mythological symbols. For the artist, this exhibition becomes a milestone—the first in a series that envisions both Pyeongando (道, province) and Pyeongando (圖, image/map).

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