
 

Reflection and Transparency December
11, 2003 - January 9, 2004
Opening Reception: Thursday, December 11, 6-8
p.m.
Gallery Korea
Gallery Korea is pleased to announce "Reflection
and Transparency," a group exhibition which
features six international artists. This exhibition
gathers paintings and photographs that employ
figurative language to explore trace memories
of familiar things, oscillating between the self
to the social, and between the psychological and
the external.
Hye-Sook Yoo's back views of female or male heads
cause us to wonder about the identity of a person.
Creating an illusion of photography, her portraits
simply show the back of a head, with mostly straight
hair against white background. The opaque, dense
layers of hair replace the commonly recognizable
facial features such as eyes and noses, thus making
the identity of the person less transparent.
Fran Beallor's paintings assemble an interior
consisting of familiar and exotic objects. They
reflect the mysterious desire that dwells in her
subconscious and escape any prediction or reasoning.
Her recent self-portrait series carries on this
act of reflection to herself. Focusing on her
own face, she grasps the fleeing moments of her
life. While Beallor's face paintings shows a multi-faceted
self in various forms, often rendered in crisp
lines and planes, Sarah Soon Kim's paintings use
monochromatic colors on textured surfaces to depict
faces of friends or religious figures. Kim's search
for inner tranquility is often mirrored in the
heads and torsos rendered in forms similar to
ones in old, weathered murals.
Jinhwan Choi has been photographing young males
and females in their own living space. His photographs
not only capture their personal, intimate surroundings
but also reveal the character of the resident
through everyday, mundane furniture, bedding,
and objects like a television set. Hosok Chung's
recent works explore urban imagery that he encounters
while he travels. His black and white photos magnify
details of the city, such as a manhole on the
street, to a scale that people could not miss.
Jeff Pullen's urban landscapes are reflection
of alienated city dwellers' psychology. Constructed
of architectural materials such as doors, tiles,
and bricks, his paintings show nostalgic views
of cityscape in which store signs and advertising
boards dominate the city.
During an opening reception on Thursday, December
11 from 6 - 8 pm, there will be performances by
two emerging artists based in New York, Ji-Young
Kim and Anyssa Kim. Ji-Young Kim will perform
"Point of View," inspired by the traditional
Korean dance Salp'uri (spirit cleansing scarf
dance). Anyssa Kim will read some of her recent
English poems.
For further information, please contact Eunhee
Yang at (212) 759-9550. Gallery Korea is open
from 10 am to 7 pm Monday to Friday and from 10
am to 4 pm on Saturday. The gallery will be closed
on December 25 and January 1.
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