Installation view of 《To Counterclockwise》 © DOOSAN Gallery

DOOSAN Gallery Seoul presents 《To Counterclockwise》, a solo exhibition by Park Kyung Ryul, from June 10 to July 11, 2020. Park was selected to participate in the DOOSAN Residency New York through an open call in 2019. After her solo exhibition in Korea, Park will commence her residency in New York, followed by her solo exhibition at DOOSAN Gallery New York. 

Park doesn’t see her works as typical paintings that convey or capture a certain story and illusion. Her works, which she calls ‘sculptural paintings’ herself, focus on the gesture of ‘drawing’, and involve spreading outside of her images the various elements that lie within them.

She then experiments with the different spatial elements like the exhibition floor, stairs, walls and ceilings, as well as immaterial aspects including light and time, as the conditions for her paintings.


Installation view of 《To Counterclockwise》 © DOOSAN Gallery

While the physical gesture of “painting” lies on the premise of a certain intention, the artist’s physical actions of applying brush strokes on an empty canvas construct unpredicted forms that are different from her intentions and create unexpected images depending on the materials used. Therefore, Park’s sculptural paintings are coincidental records left by the artist’s physical movements via the materials of paint and brush.

They’re images of forms that are not representational of anything, rather than being part of a certain narrative structure. Park’s images of forms send the viewer back in time through which the forms are made, inviting them to imagine the body’s movement and temporality within the images.

An exhibition displaying approximately 10 works, 《To Counterclockwise》 maintains the form of a typical painting exhibition where paintings hang on the wall, while delving into the rectangular frames of the painting. And by doing so, Park sheds light on the gesture of painting and material properties of the medium, making new fascinating explorations into paintings that are material rather than narrative. 

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