London Korean Links

Covering things Korean in London and beyond since 2006

Exhibition news: Dansaekhwa — Minimal Korean Art of the 1970s, at The Arts Club

Coinciding with the opening of the Park Seo-bo solo exhibition at White Cube is a broader exhibition of Dansaekhwa at the Arts Club. Open to non-members by appointment only at the times mentioned below.

Dansaekhwa: Minimal Korean Art of the 1970s

The Arts Club
40 Dover Street | Mayfair | London W1S 4NP | www.theartsclub.co.uk
18 January – mid April 2016
Non-members: Wed & Sat, 10am-12pm, by appointment only.
Private View: Wednesday 20 January, 6-8pm

Ha Chung-yun, Conjunction 09-008', 2009, Oil on canvas, 180 x 120 cm, Courtesy The Arts Club
Ha Chong-hyun, Conjunction 09-008′, 2009, Oil on canvas, 180 x 120 cm, Courtesy The Arts Club

The Arts Club is delighted to announce Dansaekhwa: Minimal Korean Art of the 1970s, an exhibition focusing on the masters of one of the late 20th century’s most compelling art movements. Translated as ‘Monochrome’, Dansaekhwa refers to a radical style of minimal painting that emerged in South Korea in the 1970s, characterized by reductive, meditative compositions and a neutral colour palette. Works by masters Chung Sang-hwa, Ha Chong-hyun, Kwon Young-woo, Lee Ufan and Park Seo-bo will be on display.

With a strong aesthetic ideal focused on the unity between artist and nature, each artist of the radical Dansaekhwa movement forged a new and refined approach to repetition and mark making.

Early practitioners of the Dansaekhwa movement were considered particularly groundbreaking for the use of non-traditional materials not commonly associated with art. Ha Chong-hyun (b.1935) incorporates fishing nets, newspaper and burlap sacks into his work. Pushing paint through the fabric of the sacks, and dragging paint along its surface with various materials, he subverts the traditional application of oil to canvas and control associated with brushwork.

The works of Chung Sang-hwa (b.1932) and Kwon Young-woo (1926-2013) employ laborious and meditative working methods to invoke a feeling of calm in the viewer. Chung folds a primed canvas to allow fragments of zinc paint to flake or be removed from the surface. He then carefully applies the resultant negative space with acrylic paint resulting in subtle, near-imperceptible gradations in tone. Kwon builds up thin layers of traditional Korean paper, tearing, scratching, and dousing the surfaces with ink, in an endeavor to create a sense of pure harmony between the two materials.

One of the fundamental concepts of Dansaekhwa is the idea of the artist as conduit of his energy or consciousness into an artwork, and this can be manifested in references to language. Lee Ufan (b.1936) engages a philosophical approach through the use of repetition in his work, exploring themes of gesture and mark-making. His repeated lines and dashes reference the profound discipline of traditional calligraphy; Park Seo-bo (b.1931) employs simple but dramatic gestures that allude to a rudimentary and unknown linguistic system.

The Arts Club curators bring together a selection of rare master works from this art movement following an extraordinary surge in recognition in these underappreciated artists among art world audiences. The exhibition coincides with a solo exhibition of Park Seo-bo at White Cube in January 2016.

The exhibition is curated by Amelie von Wedel and Pernilla Holmes from Wedel Art.

Links:

(automatically generated) Read LKL’s review of this event here.

One thought on “Exhibition news: Dansaekhwa — Minimal Korean Art of the 1970s, at The Arts Club

  1. It’s always pleasurable to view artworks in a venue that is not a white cube. The lived-in quarters of the Arts Club was a lovely location to see work by some key Dansaekhwa artists. A downside of the venue, though, was that no-one was on hand to talk about the pieces, and while it was pretty clear who some of the artists were, you needed to have a fairly in-depth knowledge to identify them all: there weren’t any labels on the walls to identify the works.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.