

FLUID
January 17 -February 15
2002
MATTHEW CHASE DANIEL
GRACE JUNGWOOK RIM
DONG HYUP KIM STEFANO
PASQUINI
JOON WON OH JUNG OK KIM
The expansive reach of this exhibition encompasses
various media including painting, photography, collage
and ceramics. In addition, there is a mixture of
styles from Eastern and Western traditions.
Dong Hyup Kim has worked within the Korean tradition
of ink painting for most of his long career. Recently,
he has extended his approach to this tradition
by incorporating vivid colors to create subtle
images that appear to emerge in an amorphous space.
Jung Ok Kim who is a National Treasure in Korea
makes ceramic pots in the tradition of Punch’ong
ware that was first developed in the 15th Century.
A large bottle in the shape of a rice bale has
a floral image painted with iron pigment displays
the relaxed harmony that has long been treasured
in Korean ceramics. The small bowls that are decorated
with a swipe of white slip painted with a coarse
brush reveal the simple aesthetics that were such
an important contribution to the austerity of
the Japanese tea ceremony.
Ink and clay and paint have fluid qualities that
respond to the artist’s manipulation. This
plasticity is evident in the paintings of Joon
Won Oh whose abstractions have a dense textured
surface. Grace Junwook Rim combines flat expanses
of paint with passages of small circles that stream
in lines across the surface of the canvas. In
her paintings a sense of a landscape is evoked
as a site of convergence between external impression
and internal sensation.
Stefano Pasquini photographs what might be called
mundane aspects of the world. These uneventful
images are enlarged and printed on to aluminum
sheets and encourage a celebration of the overlooked
and the everyday. There is a convergence of the
historical and the contemporary everyday in the
collages of Matthew Chase Daniel. He incorporates
imagery from 19th Century Japanese wood-block
prints within scenes made from magazine clippings.
The photographic backgrounds of seascapes or banal
images of highways replace the Asian landscape,
yet the images are embellished with frames of
dried organic material such as fish or seaweed.
This convergence of old and new, East and West
indicates the flexibility of contemporary aesthetic
practice: where the past flows into the present
and the border between East and West becomes historical
and mutable.
For further information please contact Gerard
McCarthy 212-759-9550
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