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Hyunjoo Park: The Light of Reason, Tenri Opening on Monday, May 16,from 6-8pm |
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작성자: NYKorea |
조회: 12671 등록일: 2016-05-12 |
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FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE:
Tenri Cultural Institute,
New York proudly presents Hyunjoo Park: The Light of
Reason an exhibition from May 16th through May
30th, 2016 with an Opening Reception on May
16thfrom 6-8PM
Park’s images have to do with
light, so her critics tell us. But they can also discussed in terms of the
post-minimalist aesthetic that in its pure form interacts with the viewer.
Park’s pieces are site-specific incorporating the gallery space within her them.
The shadows caused when installing the boxlike pieces on the white walls, create
secondary patterns. In fact, the shadows in No. 8, appear to be solid
and discrete pieces in themselves added to the rectangular sculptures. This
results in a figure ground ambiguity that can be discussed in terms of Gestalt
psychology that shows us the way we as humans group parts in order to understand
them and the way we separate solid and void whose reading has to do with the law
of simplicity. By keeping her volumes to the simplest possible geometric forms
Park engages in the interplay not only of solid and void but also in 2 and 3
dimensional space. Echoes of Victor Vasarely’s Op-Art seems to be making their
way into Hyunjoo’s works too. Vasarely, the father of this style through his
1960s and 70s work influenced a whole generation of artists continuing his
kinetic visual experiments and transforming the flat surface into endless
possibilities.
In continuing this track Park’s work like Vasarely’s 50s
pieces and statements, also has a technological element to it. She sprays
rectangular or circular pieces with the paint gun thus creating with mechanical
means while referencing the idea of light through her use of nuanced color
shading. In his efforts to bring art within everyone’s reach Vasarely used new
technologies and in his statements predicted an art that could be projected
anywhere in the world within two days thereby removing the work’s aura or
singular authority. Park’s modular pieces speak to the idea of reproduction in
the mechanical age that recalls the words of Walter Benjamin who wrote about the
work’s aura in his “The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction.” He
stated that “when the mysticism of originality is removed, everyone can enjoy
art.” This tendency was also present in Duchamp’s unconventional and
unprecedented Readymades that moved the importance of the artwork from
the object itself to the idea of the artist. Like Duchamp, Park provokes the
viewer to think by questioning the most basic values of conventional
artmaking.
Post-minimalism is process oriented art with site specific
aspects and can be varied or continue the minimalist interest in abstraction and
mechanically based art. As seen by her Light and Monad series, of 2015
and in their modular nature, Park’s sculptures fit into this vein. But, Park
activates another idea as well, one that has personal meaning, one that she
describes best in her own words “I wonder what we get out of such an incomplete
and ambiguous grind that we call life …. Then finally I realized that by the
work I do – that is, tracing light on canvas – I was actually in the process of
finding myself.”
FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Please contact Tenri Cultural Institute at 212-645-2800 or tenri@tci.org
. The curators ThaliaVrachopoulos at 646-344-9009 tvrachopoulos@gmail.com Suechung Koh at 201- 724-7077,
pariskoh@gmail.com
[ⓒ 뉴욕코리아(www.newyorkkorea.net), 무단 전재 및 재배포 금지]
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