Exhibitions
《What I Want to See》, 2023.04.27 – 2023.06.03, KICHE
April 20, 2023
KICHE
Installation view ©KICHE
《What I Want to See》 is a group exhibition
that features the works of three artists, Ahram Kwon, Anna Han, and Hwang
Wonhae. The exhibition will highlight the contrasts between the artists’
existing major oeuvres and their new works. The title of the exhibition, “What
I Want to See,” borrows partially from the title of American artist Philip
Guston’s book, I Paint What I Want to See.
The book is a compilation of
conversations Gustong himself had with fellow artists since 1960 and is
structured to give a glimpse into the evolution of his artistic concerns and
choices (of methodology) of nearly 20 years (spanning broadly from the late
teens to the 40s), in addition to his detailed practices. Taking inspiration
from this approach, the exhibition examines why the three artists chose their
specific subjects and through what perspectives they are engaging with their
objects of inquiry.
Installation view ©KICHE
Ahram
Kwon reimagines ‘(the methodology of) what is being seen’ through the media.
The artist pays attention to the fact that the digital network, which casts a
tightly knit net, affects the inner psyche of each individual, establishing
itself as a major axis of so-called “subjectivity.” For Kwon, the world
transmitted as a two-dimensional image can only be one in which details are
omitted, disparate, and distorted from its true reality; it is one that has
transformed into an “illusion” that has no resemblance to the original subject.
Reflecting this view, Kwon, in her work Flat Matter,
compresses visual information into symbolic images. The mirror juxtaposed with
the images on the monitor continuously attempts to affirm its existence through
an interaction that creates depth beyond the flat surface, only to fail
repeatedly.
Anna Han explores the materialization of spatiality in various ways through the
media of painting and installation. Maintaining the shallow and flat colored
canvas, Han expands her work into sitespecific space design using not only
lighting and fabric but also varied canvas support structures by staggering
them, stacking them like a tower, or placing them laid down. Amidst these
variations, her works would never escape the category of painting even if they
presented themselves in a more explicit form of spatial installation.
Continuing this approach, Han’s new work, Red Galaxy,
incorporates neon to the sides of the canvas and brings light to the
three-dimensions of the color spectrum. In essence, the space she seeks to
create with her pictorial language is close to an intimate space where personal
narratives and subsequent imagery are projected in their multiple layers.
Hwang Wonhae rediscovers the exterior elements of the buildings that constitute
urban landscapes and expressively breathes life into the spatiality (i.e.
narratives and history) embedded in them. By repeatedly adding, spilling, and
wiping paint on the canvas, she builds multiple layers to capture its
ever-changing internal and external dynamism. In particular, Hwang’s recent
works follow the changes in the center of her focus that gradually shifts from
a superficial representation of the physical phenomena to an exploration of the
formative expression that utilizes her unique pictorial gestures.