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MAGNETIC FIELDS

Past exhibition
27 August - 8 October 2022
  • ABOUT
  • Selected Works
  • RELATED CONTENT
  • Lee Bul. Installation view, Magnetic Fields, BB&M, Seoul, 2022. (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Lee Bul. Installation view, Magnetic Fields, BB&M, Seoul, 2022. (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    LEE BUL  PERDU CXLII, 2022  Mother of pearl, acrylic paint on wooden base panel, stainless steel frame  Triptych. 80 x 180 x 6 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Jeongsu Woo. Installationview, Magnetic Fields, BB&M, Seoul, 2022. (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Jeongsu Woo. Sunlight_3, 2022 (left) and It was all a dream_2, 2022 (right). (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Jeongsu Woo. Installationview, Magnetic Fields, BB&M, Seoul, 2022. (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    JEONGSU WOO. BLUE HEART_2, 2022 (LEFT) AND SUNLIGHT_2, 2022 (RIGHT). (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Installationview, Magnetic Fields, BB&M, Seoul, 2022. (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    BAE YOUNG-WHAN. SPACE ODDITY_C# SILVER CODE 2022 (LEFT) AND SPACE ODDITY_TRANSCRIPTION IN G(GREY), 2022 (RIGHT). (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Jin Han Lee. That Night, 2022 (left) and Evening on the Seventh, 2022 (right). (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Heecheon Kim. Installation view, Magnetic Fields, BB&M, Seoul, 2022. (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Lee Bul. Installation view, Magnetic Fields, BB&M, Seoul, 2022.
  • ABOUT


  • Magnetic Fields

    27 august - 8 october 2022

     

     

    이불    LEE BUL 

    배영환  BAE YOUNG-WHAN 

    우정수  JEONGSU WOO

    김희천  HEECHEON KIM

    이진한  JIN HAN LEE

     

    PRESS RELEASE →
    Magnetic Fields marks the launch of the fall season at BB&M with a showcase of new works by contemporary Korean artists represented by the gallery. Headlined by Lee Bul, widely recognized as the leading Korean artist of her generation, the exhibition also presents long-awaited new work by Bae Young-whan, a key figure identified with the influential, albeit loosely defined, post-minjung movement, which melds neo-conceptual strategies to a social consciousness informed by Korea’s turbulent modernity. The show also features a selection of new paintings and works on paper by Jeongsu Woo, among the most closely watched young Korean painters working today, ahead of his solo exhibition scheduled for later this fall at BB&M. Jin Han Lee, another painter who has garnered considerable acclaim early in her career (inclusion in Bloomberg New Contemporaries and Saatchi New Sensations), will also unveil new works. Rounding out the show is an immersive VR installation by Heecheon Kim, a young artist fast rising in international prominence with multimedia works that engage with various post-Internet cultural phenomena against the background of a technologically charged Korean society.
    Read more
    Sympathetic connections as well as productive tensions run through Magnetic Fields. Lee Bul, the eldest of the artists here, has developed a distinguished oeuvre over several decades with works that explore the experiential and ideological dimensions of the posthuman body. The Perdu series of wall works on view, while sensuously painterly, elaborates on motifs from her early biomorphic sculptures, the fusion of mechanical and organic forms that delve into questions surrounding the body in a culture increasingly permeated by technology.

    Heecheon Kim, the youngest in the show, born around the the dawn of the Internet, takes up related issues in multimedia works examining both the pleasures and anxieties of a techno-utopian society which promises to loosen the self from corporeal bounds. In Ghost (1990), a VR work based on an actual incident involving an acquaintance paralyzed in a weightlifting accident, the artist probes the untranslatable gaps between reality and pseudo- and parallel realities, generating moments of unexpected emotional resonance.

    VR technologies have also played a role in the work of Jin Han Lee, though as a means to reconsider timeless questions of representational space in the traditional medium of painting. Having long worked between London and Seoul, she has developed an intimate pictorial language—by turns sensuous, exuberant, and poignant—that attempts to convey the fragmented, ineffable moments in the spatial and linguistic interstices of her personal experience.

    A preoccupation with language, especially the collective vernacular of pop songs, also figures prominently in Bae Young-whan’s art. In earlier works speaking to a peculiarly Korean brand of self-destructive, self-romanticizing masculinity, he used shattered liquor bottles to form sentimental Korean song lyrics on discarded plywood collected from building sites. For this show, he’s taken the more universally familiar notes of David Bowie’s “Space Oddity” and put them through a geometric reformulation, rendering them icily abstract, a visual correlative to the song’s theme of eternal existential drift.

    Jeongsu Woo’s paintings freely deploy a similar method, sampling and remixing elements high and low to compose a palimpsest of references and signifiers that elide temporal and cultural parameters. As suggested by the title of one of his catalogues, Flâneur Notes, his canvases convey the sensibilities of an urbane, witty observer, a visual account of what it means to be a young painter in the metropolitan East in the early 21st century. Alternating between homage, appropriation, and subversion, his work is nevertheless an acknowledgment of the enduring craft of painting, characterized as it is by a sensitive attention to palette, gestures and strokes of the brush, and pictorial composition.

    Working in a range of mediums, from painting and sculpture to multimedia installation, and at varying stages in their careers, the five artists gathered here constitute a dynamic, forward-looking cohort, their practices exemplifying some of the most vital recent developments in Korean art.
  • SELECTED WORKS


  • Lee Bul  Perdu CXXXVIII, 2022  Mother of pearl, acrylic paint on wooden base panel, stainless steel frame  163.3 x 113.3 x 6.5 framed (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Lee Bul  Perdu CXLI, 2022  Mother of pearl, acrylic paint on wooden base panel, stainless steel frame  163.3 x 113.3 x 6.5 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Jeongsu Woo  Sunlight_2, 2022  Acrylic, ink on canvas  116.8 x 91 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Jeongsu Woo  It was all a dream_2, 2022  Acrylic, ink on canvas  116.8 x 91 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Jin Han Lee  That Night, 2022  Oil on linen  173 x 152 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Jin Han Lee  Evening on the Seventh, 2022  Oil on linen  152 x 118 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Bae Young-whan  Space Oddity_Transcription in G(grey), 2022  Acrylic on canvas  92 x 73 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Bae Young-whan  Space Oddity_C# silver Code, 2022  Acrylic, gel medium. silver leaves on canvas  92 x 73 cm (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Heecheon Kim  Ghost(1990), 2021  VR installation, 8K Stereo Scopic Video, Color + B/W, Kinetic Sensor, 4ch audio(2 from Oculus Device, 2 from stereo speakers)  13 minutes 25 seconds (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Lee Bul, Perdu CXXXVIII, 2022.
  • RELATED CONTENT


    • Lee Bul
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      Lee Bul

    • Bae Young-whan
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      Bae Young-whan

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