Period| | 2020.01.16 - 2020.03.03 |
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Operating hours| | Mon-Sat 10:30-18:30 Sun 12:00-18:30 |
Space| | Gallery Grimson |
Address| | 22, Insadong 10-gil, Jongno-gu, Seoul, Republic of Korea |
Closed| | holiday |
Price| | Free |
Phone| | 02-733-1045 |
Web site| | 홈페이지 바로가기 |
Artist| |
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정보수정요청
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Exhibition Information
Gallagirimson is hosting the Lee Jae-sam Personal Exhibition, Moonlight Records, to celebrate its 2020 New Year’s Day plan. Lee Jae-sam is the author who expresses black space with charcoal. Lee Jae-sam, who will be making his 34th solo exhibition this year, will present a series of trees, fog, bamboo and waterfalls, as well as the new masterpiece of the Hongmaehwa painting. In his youth, the author, who mainly worked on figures, abstracts, and installations, became an image of the moon, and the black landscape, which appeared as a black space rather than a black light, used charcoal to show the silence and the erosion beyond the object. The author says charcoal, or charcoal, is used as an expression of the soul as part of the painting rather than as a material for drawing. In the early days, it used both food and charcoal to gradually come up with a work centered on charcoal. In the dark, the author has the will to present a vision of what is likely to be an invisible, but "ultra-moon" space with charcoal, through the sound of moonlight, moonlight and the smell of moonlight. The artist, who continued to work on charcoal, won the 3rd Park Soo-geun Art Award in 2018, earning more possibilities and recognition as a writer. The author, who mainly focuses on masterpieces, thought that it was necessary to spread the soul of nature through a huge canvas rather than a small canvas to express the power and energy of nature. The author's black landscape starts with natural exploration. After searching the area for the necessary scenery, we are working on the process of reviving the writer's new natural environment by adding his thoughts and ideas. Thus, the landscape of Lee Jae-sam is real and not real, and it is expressed as a landscape where abstract and figurative images coexist through black space. The author spends countless hours rubbing and rubbing charcoal on canvas to represent the black landscape, embracing a black space deep into the screen. Lee Jae-sam's woodwork, which raises the interest of many collectors and art officials overseas, is the greatest part of the soul expressed by the writer, life and the monastic process. In this exhibition, you will be able to see the meaning of charcoal, moonlight, and black space that the artist has been trying to show, including Lee Jae-sam's representative work. The author continues to show through his work that our lives and souls, the space we live in, and other places.