Koo Jiyoon, Insomnia, 2022, Oil on linen, 76 x 60 cm © Koo Jiyoon

Gallery Purple is pleased to present 《Layers》, a solo exhibition by Koo Jiyoon.

Koo Jiyoon is known for her abstract paintings that explore images of the city as an organism. Through abstract compositions in which formal elements such as color and line intertwine, she depicts the psychological landscapes shaped by desire and memory within urban environments. Without resorting to direct representation, her works visualize memories accumulated through sensory experiences of the city.


Koo Jiyoon, Vintage, 2022, Oil on linen, 50 x 30 cm © Koo Jiyoon

Living in large metropolitan areas, the artist became interested in the motif of the city through her encounters with countless construction sites, where she became acutely aware of scale, noise, and dust. In the continual processes of demolition, construction, and transformation, she came to perceive the city as a living organism.

Each work is built up over time through successive layers of paint, and its completion is determined according to the artist’s own criteria. Throughout the process, layers of paint react to one another, while previously painted layers may remain visible, become obscured, or merge into complex entanglements when the work is resumed after a period of time. The artist employs this method as a painterly language capable of drawing out irregular experiences of time.


Koo Jiyoon, Bonfire, 2022, Oil on linen, 27.3 x 22 cm © Koo Jiyoon

Because her process repeatedly involves layering, covering, and wiping away paint, most of her works naturally develop color palettes dominated by grays and blues. Through formal elements expressed in colors and lines that resemble the city’s continuous cycles of destruction and creation, she reconstructs the accumulation of time—something that cannot be captured as a fixed image—into the form of abstract painting.

Through the individual works presented in 《Layers》, each bearing its own title, the artist invites viewers to imagine the sensations she experienced in relation to unseen subjects, offering a body of abstract paintings that evoke what cannot be directly perceived.

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