London Korean Links

Covering things Korean in London and beyond since 2006

Jukhee Kwon in October Gallery 40th Birthday celebration

October Gallery, founded in 1979, has pioneered the development of what it calls the Transvangarde – the trans-cultural avant-garde. They are having a special exhibition to celebrate their 40th birthday. Jukhee Kwon will be one of the artists exhibiting:

Dream No Small Dream

Celebrating 40 Years of the Transvangarde
11 April – 25 May 2019 | 12:30 to 17:30 from Tuesday to Saturday.
October Gallery | 24 Old Gloucester Street | Bloomsbury | London WC1N 3AL | www.octobergallery.co.uk

Dream No Small Dream

October Gallery celebrates the anniversary of 40 years of energetic activity in London with an exhibition of works by some of the Gallery’s major artists, including newly commissioned works. A special programme of events will run alongside the exhibition to mark the Gallery’s rich history.

The 40 year exhibition will include works by Gerald Wilde, Aubrey Williams, Kenji Yoshida, Brion Gysin and William S. Burroughs, all artists the Gallery first showed in the 1980s.

Gysin, a radical cultural visionary, artist, writer and performer, introduced his lifelong friend, the writer William S. Burroughs, to the ‘cut-up’ technique. Together they experimented in sound and image, using collage, light painting, writing and film.

In the early 1990s, the Gallery began working with El Anatsui who will be represented in the exhibition by one of his sumptuous metal wall sculptures. Romuald Hazoumè, first shown in 2005, will create a new work especially for this exhibition. With the ubiquitous plastic container as his iconic signature, Hazoumè is known for his masks and other monumental installations, which act as metaphors of African history, place and identity. This exhibition will also feature the work of Eddy Kamuanga Ilunga, who began showing with the Gallery in 2015. His haunting paintings explore the seismic shifts in the economic, political and social relationships of the peoples of the Congo (D.R.C) that have taken place since the colonial period began.

LR Vandy has recently joined the Gallery. In her highly sought after ‘Hull’ sculptures she transforms the hulls of model boats, animating them with fishing floats, porcupine quills and needles. These ‘hulls’ refer to the hidden world of indentured labour and the perilous journeys which migrants are forced to undergo. Jukhee Kwon creates works using the printed pages of abandoned and disused books, which she cuts and manipulates by hand to create magnificent sculptures that brim with energy. Her subtle interventions infuse everyday objects with worlds of alternative meaning.

Kinetic light sculptor Paul Friedlander will transform the October Gallery courtyard with a light installation. His light sculptures have been exhibited around the world, including a twenty-metre ‘DNA strand’ that hung in the New York Hall of Science.

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

One thought on “Jukhee Kwon in October Gallery 40th Birthday celebration

  1. It was nice to catch Jukhee Kwon at the opening event of Dream No Small Dream on a rare trip to London. Congratulations to Jukhee on being selected for the celebratory exhibition, which contained a wide range of vibrant work from Africa and Asia.

    Jukhee Kwon at October Gallery

    (photo courtesy October Gallery / Jukhee Kwon)

Comments are closed.