Hyunmo
Yang’s practice begins with unstable forms found in the external world. The
artist discovers clues for his work in the sky outside his window, distant
urban landscapes, and flickering objects such as candle flames. These subjects
possess paradoxical qualities: they constantly change while simultaneously
maintaining a center. Precarious Fire(2024) directly
demonstrates this concern, pictorially rendering a state that wavers as if
about to extinguish, yet does not lose its core.
In his
first solo exhibition, 《Black Coloured
Light》(Show and Tell, 2019), he explored “darkness that
does not disappear into light” within the excessive brightness of Seoul. Here,
darkness is not treated as mere visual absence but as a perceptual condition
that recedes the moment it begins to appear. Moving beyond the binary structure
of light and darkness, he proposes a paradoxical logic: by making something
visible, one reveals what remains unseen.
Later, in 《Burning symmetry》(Roy Gallery, 2023), Yang
investigates the relationship between blurriness and solidity through symmetry.
Symmetry is interpreted not as simple repetition, but as a process of finding a
center within unstable forms. The 'Shield'(2023) series foregrounds solidity,
the 'Soft Squares'(2023) series questions that solidity, and the 'Burning
Symmetry'(2023) series blurs the image once again. What matters here is not
form itself, but the process through which balance is constructed and dismantled.
In his
recent solo exhibition 《Whispering
Currents》(Roy Gallery, 2025), exterior landscapes
overlap more directly with inner states. The sky outside the window becomes
intertwined with the artist’s emotions, memories, and projections of future
time. At this stage, the act of observing the world coincides with
self-reflection, and sensory experience expands into ontological inquiry.