Art Almighty
October 30, 2007- November 24, 2007
Reception: November 1, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
530 W 25th St
SoYoun Jeong was born in Seoul, Korea.
Since 2004, Jeong has been working and living in New York.
She is an artist working with mixed media. She has been working on
video art, installation art, prints, sculpture, photograph and
painting.
(From Jonathan Goodman’s essay “SoYoun Jeong: Between Fact and Fiction”
for “Art Almighty – SoYoun Jeong”.)
SoYoun Jeong is a contemporary artist educated both in Korea and New
York.
Jeong has titled her show “Art Almighty,” imbuing her exhibition with a
cosmic, if not necessarily pious, outlook. The proposals made by her
work bring up interesting ideas, in which her predilection for an
interface between nature and culture establishes mergers that feel
highly contemporary.
In Uncanny Garden, her projection of video images onto two connected
walls collapses the length of an entire day into an experience lasting
only three and a half minutes. The real flowers inject reality into a
fleeting demonstration of extended time. Jeong will transplant the
survived blooms into the backyard of a friend from Brooklyn.
The conflict between artifice and reality is expressed as a screen
projecting the sun’s illumination and an actual garden; however, the
final experience is that of survival and transformation: those flowers
that continue to exist are planted again in an outdoor field. The
experiment is successful in that the process of life continues, even if
damage has been done.
Crazy Moon, Jeong’s experimental single-channel video installation with
four flat monitors, shows a moon dancing in a line or arc that defines
itself in relation to the center created by the monitors’ display.
The moon on its travels creates many kinds of shapes, the result of its
flight across the screen. The monitors approximate the sky, although in
a thoroughly non-natural manner. Again we find the ideas of being and
seeming beautifully implied in Jeong’s imagination; she attempts on a
regular basis to join the poetic to the electronic.
In a third piece, Vice Versa, Jeong dizzyingly shifts from digital
print to painting and back again. In two small double images, she
begins by taking a photo that she then digitizes by scanning into the
computer. Then she paints by hand over the print taken from the photo,
at which point she scans the painting, printing the newly scanned
image. The pictures themselves, striking abstractions composed of
massed colors, are beautiful in their own right, but the complexity of
their origins lends them a conceptual acuity that is very much of our
time.
Jeong articulates a language which is not reductive but which, instead,
synthesizes a union between that which is artificial and that which is
genuine.
She looks to the future, combining means of expression that are not
dialectically opposed but instead mutually supportive.
Jeong had had six solo shows and over one hundred shows. The latest
solo show is “CTRL TIME: SoYoun Jeong” (Amelie A. Wallace Gallery, SUNY
at Old Westbury, New York. 2007). Her works have been shown at the
Museum of Contemporary Art, Shanghai, China, Samsung Leeum Museum,
National Museum of Contemporary Art, Seoul, Korea, and Mori Art Museum,
Tokyo. Japan, and others…
A reception for the opening will be held between 6pm and 8pm on
Thursday, November 1st. The exhibition remains through Nov. 24, 2007.
Gallery hours are Tuesday through Saturday between 11am and 6pm.
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | map | | Gallery | Amos Eno Gallery | | Address | 530 W 25th St, 6th Fl New York (Chelsea) NY, 10001 United States | | Phone | 212-226-5342 | | Hours | Tue-Sat 11-6 | |
| |
|