Hanna Jo
is a painter based in Germany. In her early practice, she explored the human
body through an anatomical lens by referencing portraits from art history,
delving into the essence of the human form. Her early work, such
as Weihnachtsmarkt (2022), sensitively captured
facial expressions and gestures, reflecting the relationship between
individuals and their environments, and conveying the emotional flux and social
atmosphere embedded in everyday moments.
However,
after experiencing the pandemic in Germany and directly confronting biases
based on race, gender, and appearance, Jo began to shift toward neutralized,
depersonalized figures that remove external features. She adopted anatomy as a
symbolic language that reveals what lies beneath the “surface,” raising
questions about the universality and equality of human existence. In her
practice, anatomy functions not merely as a biological structure, but as a
visual tool for revealing the common internal framework of all human beings.
Works
like Mass_series No.7 (2023) eliminate markers of
external identity to present recomposed bodies that reflect the biological
equality and emotional core of human existence. Over time, Jo expanded her
imagination to connect the internal structures of the body with natural
topographies, constructing painterly spaces that interweave bodily
cross-sections with earth layers and plant root systems.
In her
two-person exhibition 《Land of Origins》 (P21, 2025) with Chunkook Lee, she introduced hybrid organisms
composed of roots, microbes, and organs, articulating a worldview where the
human and natural, interior and exterior, are entangled. At the group
exhibition 《Young Korean Artists 2025》 at the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art in Gwacheon,
she further advanced these ideas through bold and experimental formal
expressions.