As the first exhibition of Kukje Gallery’s 2022 program, Kukje Gallery is pleased to announce 《Life》, a solo exhibition of Sungsic Moon. On view from January 21 to February 28 at the gallery’s Busan branch, Life is the artist's third solo show with Kukje Gallery following those in 2019 and 2011. In the exhibition, Moon presents small records of landscape occupied by what he refers to as “us, here, now.”
These works probe into the prosaic details of life and center around 100 new “oil drawing” works—which involve a unique process where the artist carves directly into the impasto surface, capturing intensity and depth, focusing on the minutest detail—that affectionately observe the scenes of daily life and the plant and animal lives around his home.
《Life》 also includes new works from his series of large-scale rose paintings titled ‘Just Life’ (ongoing since 2019), and approximately 10 drawings from his ‘A Mediocre Landscape: Earth Landscape’, which were previously presented at the 2021 Jeonnam International SUMUK Biennale.
As explicitly suggested in the title of the artist’s last solo exhibition at Kukje Gallery in 2019, 《Beautiful. Strange. Dirty.,》 Sungsic Moon's work creates a distinctive balance of pathos and beauty, capturing everyday moments in the ordinary landscape and turning them into a permanent record.
In this exhibition, Moon extends and expands upon the themes of his 2019 exhibition, refining still further his signature technique of scratching and drawing directly onto wet oil paint, while continuing to fondly frame his subjects as “us, here, now.”
What distinguishes these new works is that Moon, an artist who was often characterized by his abiding interest in visualizing the complex subtleties that lie on the obverse dimension of the world as we know it, has now shifted all of his focus to depicting the inner and external beauty of moments we encounter in our “insignificant,” ordinary, daily lives.
This interest in mundanity is beautifully illustrated by Moon's depictions of various plant species such as the weeping cherry tree, lily, plum blossom, magnolia, pear tree, pomegranate tree, and quince tree, all commonly found around the artist’s home in Busan as well as his hometown of Gimcheon.
The undivided exhibition space of the Busan branch gives ample room to showcase these flowers and trees that represent spring, summer, autumn, and winter, creating a small but also a wholly integrated microcosm.