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For Art Basel Hong Kong: Online Viewing Room, Arario Gallery will present works of KIM Kulim (b.1936), CHOI Byung-so (b.1943), KIM Soun-Gui (b.1946), who led the Korean experimental art from 1960-80s. KIM Soun-Gui’s “Colporteur” (1989) is especially worthy of its title, which combines an acoustic guitar, train, and music harmoniously with the act of “wandering around”. It suggests many possibilities of natural encounters between human-prescribed categories and invisible areas through the act of “Wandering” by the artist who spent his entire life working for art, writing, and educating in Korea and France.
In addition, KIM Kulim’s controversial film work “Civilization · Woman · Money”, which was finally completed in 2016 since its starting year of 1969 will be introduced. It critically captures the lives of young people who had to swarm to Seoul, or in other word towards the civilization, in the 60s, and the phase of the time. CHOI Byung-so’s chair installation “Untitled 975000-3”, which was first exhibited at Daegu Contemporary Art Festival in 1975 will also be presented. The empty chair in a school classroom represents the appearance of those who have disappeared in the discipline of society, and asks a role of the individual with only a trace by creating the distinctions of relationships between a speaker and an audience, and existence and absence. There will also be collages of sculptures of Japanese artist Kohei NAWA (b.1975) and Chinese artist CHEN Yujun (b.1976) who unravels the lives of Asians who have poetically adapted to Westernization and Modernization. Moreover, there will be paintings by Indonesian artist Eko NUGROHO (b.1977), by Filipino artist Leslie DE CHAVEZ (b.1978), and Buen CALUBAYAN (b.1980). -
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CHOI Byungso
Untitled 9750000-2, 1975Untitled 9750000-2 (1975/2020) is a notable photography work by CHOI Byungso from the 1970s. The work, which combines four images of chairs with a corresponding text, can be reinterpreted or understood through both image and text. By directing or interpreting the visual image of photographs as a language, these works draw attention to accidental and inevitable deviations as a result of disparity in meaning. CHOI created works, which expose differences in interpretation between visual language and text in order to show that visual art is not only a language in itself but also an independent domain of concepts. The viewers experience the limitations of language as a descriptive form to embody a certain reality or situation when faced with text accompanying the image of chairs with designated objects.
"Untitled 9750000-2", 1975, a group of four photos, each showing a different everyday item set on a chair, with the object's name, in English, at the top: newspaper, bottle, suitcase, umbrella. A doorknob appears at the top-left corner of each image―almost as a trompe l'oeil device, pinning the work to the wall. Though clearly miming Joseph Kosuth's "One and Three Chairs", 1965, the work does not ruminate on representation so much as collapse the referent and the signifier into one single image. All we see is the image as it stages and constructs our world." - Adela Kim, ArtforumEXHIBITIONS
2020 ARARIO SEOUL "SENS ET NON-SENS"
2021 Frieze New York OVR -
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Leslie DE CHAVEZ
Everyday, 2007Manila-born Filipino artist Leslie de Chavez (b. 1978) is an artist who cautiously deals with sensitive subjects like Imperialism and the colonial history and religion of his country. Recognized for his distinguished talent and sensibility in painting, the artist casts a bitter metaphor on the society he lives in, suggesting a response to reality through reconstructing the icons and symbols of the times. Influenced by Mexican devotional paintings (ex votos), the piece ponders on portraiture as a form to encapsulate ideas about childhood memory as re-invented narratives called forth from imagination.
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Art Basel Hong Kong 2021: Online Viewing Room
Past viewing_room