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NY | CHELSEA

Chun Kwang Young

Aggregation

May 3 – July 7, 2018

Chun Kwang Young

Aggregation 17 – NV093, 2017, mixed media with Korean mulberry paper, 73.2 x 60.2 inches/186 x 153 cm

Chun Kwang Young

Aggregation 12 – AP014, 2012, mixed media with Korean mulberry paper, 64.2 x 90.2 inches/163 x 229 cm

Chun Kwang Young

Aggregation 17 – DE100, 2017, mixed media with Korean mulberry paper, 73.2 x 65 inches/186 x 165 cm

Chun Kwang Young

Aggregation 00 – NV306, 2000, mixed media with Korean mulberry paper, 64.6 x 52 inches/164 x 132 cm

Chun Kwang Young

Aggregation 17 – DE098, 2017, mixed media with Korean mulberry paper, 72.4 x 60.6 inches/184 x 154 cm

Chun Kwang Young

Aggregation 17 – MA028 (Dream 7), 2017, mixed media with Korean mulberry paper, 59.4 x 59.4 inches/151 x 151 cm

Chun Kwang Young

Aggregation 17 – DE107, 2017, mixed media with Korean mulberry paper, 76.8 x 52 inches/195 x 132 cm

Chun Kwang Young

Aggregation 17 – DE099, 2017, mixed media with Korean mulberry paper, 59.4 x 59.4 inches/151 x 151 cm

Chun Kwang Young

Aggregation 17 – DE094, 2017, mixed media with Korean mulberry paper, 64.2 x 89.8 inches/163 x 228 cm

Chun Kwang Young

Aggregation 18 – JA006 (Star 1), 2018, mixed media with Korean mulberry paper, 63 inches/160 cm tondo

Chun Kwang Young

Aggregation 13 – AU038, 2013, mixed media with Korean mulberry paper, 96.5 x 80.7 inches/245 x 205 cm

Chun Kwang Young

Aggregation 07 – D111A, 2007, mixed media with Korean mulberry paper, 78.7 x 78.7 inches/200 x 200 cm

About This Exhibition

Sundaram Tagore Gallery is pleased to present a solo exhibition by acclaimed Korean artist Chun Kwang Young. The show—the artist’s first in New York in four years—features a comprehensive survey of work from his noted Aggregation series, which explores themes of harmony and conflict.
 
Chun Kwang Young began his career as a painter, but shifted his focus to paper sculpture in the mid-1990s. Incorporating elements of both painting and sculpture, Chun’s Aggregations are assemblages: freestanding and wall-hung amalgamations of small, triangular forms wrapped in antique mulberry paper, often tinted with teas or pigment.
 
Born in Hongchun, South Korea, in 1944, Chun grew up during the end of Japanese colonization and the brutality of the Korean War. In the early 1970s, he moved to the United States to pursue a Master’s Degree at Philadelphia College of Art, where he was deeply drawn to Abstract Expressionism. “It seemed to be the best way to freely express my surprise and sadness at witnessing the huge gap between idea and reality,” he says.

Over time, Chun became disillusioned with the materialistic drive that seemed to fuel the American dream and feelings of loneliness intensified his longing for home. During this period, Chun’s paintings, which explored the effects of light and color, reflected his interest in Abstract Expressionism, however, he ultimately found the expression inauthentic. Chun decided to return to Korea and focus on developing his own methodology, one that was wholly unique and reflective of his history and cultural identity.
 
The development of Chun’s signature technique was sparked by childhood memories of seeing medicinal herbs wrapped in mulberry paper, tied into small packages and hung from the ceiling of the local doctor’s office. He became intrigued with the idea of merging the techniques, materials and sentiment of his Korean heritage with the conceptual freedom he experienced during his Western education. 
 
Chun’s decision to use mulberry paper—known as hanji in Korea—is significant. It embodies the essence of Korean history and imparts a spiritual power, even in its most mundane applications. Derived from native trees and prized for its strength and ability to resist water, hanji has been used in Korea for centuries for everything from writing and drawing to packaging and weatherproofing.

With history in mind, Chun sources paper from antique books. “The hanji that I am currently using are from books between fifty and a hundred years old,” he says. “Each has its history and each generation of our ancestors’ joys and sorrows can be seen in the thousands of aggregated fingerprints that make my work even more mystical and precious. It’s almost as if these fingerprints are trying to have conversation with me, to explain their reasons for being there.”

To create his compositions, Chun starts with the triangular forms, which are individually cut from polystyrene, wrapped in hanji and tied with string made from the same material. He then adheres each wrapped piece to a flat support or sculptural substructure. Once adhered, some of the forms are painted by hand. The process, multifaceted and repetitive in nature, necessitates an almost meditative approach.
 
Chun’s arrangements vary from seemingly uniform surfaces to works that burst from their frames, constituting low reliefs. His palette ranges from subtle, sepia-toned hues, which naturally result from the teas he uses to tint the paper, to pigments in vibrant blue, red, orange and yellow. Some of the works employ subtle shifts in tone and color to create the illusion of craters, dips and depressions. Rendered in a restrained palette of natural hues, the overall effect is organic, geological—almost cosmic in appearance.

Over the years, Chun’s Aggregations have become more colorful and evolved in complexity and scale, but the use of mulberry paper remains at the core of his practice. Although imbued with the spirit of Korean tradition and history, Chun’s work, with its intricate, abstract compositions, is grounded in a purely contemporary context.

A printed catalogue with an essay by Dr. Marius Kwint, reader in Visual Culture, School of Art and Design, University of Portsmouth, U.K., accompanies the exhibition.

ABOUT CHUN KWANG YOUNG
 
Chun Kwang Young received a Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree from Hongik University, Seoul, and a Master of Fine Arts from the Philadelphia College of Art, Pennsylvania. His work is in numerous public collections, including The Rockefeller Foundation and the United Nations, New York; the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, Washington, D. C.; the Philadelphia Society Building, Pennsylvania; the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Seoul, and the Seoul Museum of Art; the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra; the Victoria and Albert Museum, London; and the National Museum of Fine Arts, Malta.
 
He was named Artist of the Year by the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Seoul, in 2001 and in 2009 he was awarded the Presidential Prize in the 41st Korean Culture and Art Prize by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism. 
 

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