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Tang Contemporary Art Presents Seeking in the Interstices, a Solo Exhibition by Tos Suntos

Poster credit: Tang Contemporary Art Identity, culture, belief, and faith do not always emerge at once. They take shape gradually, eventually becoming the foundation of lives through traditions, art, language, and everyday practices. Over time, these layers form the basis of how we come to understand ourselves and others. Belief often marks the beginning of this process; when it becomes unwavering, it transforms into faith, a deeper conviction that shapes values, attitudes, and ways of living. Culture, therefore, is more than an external form. It is a reservoir of belief and faith that operates beneath consciousness. It is within this terrain that Tos Suntos turns to the visual, as a means to reflect on questions of identity, faith, and freedom.
Raised in a Thai family, Tos Suntos was immersed from childhood in an environment where Buddhism intertwined with folk traditions. Over the years, these beliefs became invisible codes of conduct, quietly shaping his earliest sense of morality and value. Temples, architectural spaces, and ritual objects were once seen as protective “shields,” offering safety in daily life while also defining subtle boundaries of thought. With adolescence, however, came the influence of the digital age and increasingly diverse social interactions, which placed his inherited system of faith in sharp conflict with the demands of modern society. To adapt into society, one often cultivates an “artificial self.” For Tos Suntos, this inner dissonance went beyond personal identity. It raised a larger question: how might one navigate the structures of faith and society without being confined by them? This has since become the central aesthetic and philosophical pursuit of his practice.

Tos Suntos, Trapped in the Structure of Belief, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 200 x 180 cm Much of his work is driven by this pursuit. At its core, is Enimous, a symbolic alter ego that embodies the artist’s negotiation with these tensions. Enimous appears trapped within rigid architectural frames or distorted by geometric grids, visible yet obstructed, as if caught behind transparent walls. Tos Suntos describes this state as being “imprisoned within the system of faith.” The phrase extends beyond religion to include the norms, values, and languages that society internalizes in us. In his writings, he asks: “Can we have faith without being stuck or buried in it? Can we have our own identity without merging with the one that is defined by society?” In works such as Trapped in the Structure of Belief and Layers of Class, Enimous is elongated, repeated, or twisted, producing a visual instability that resonates with the identity anxieties of contemporary life.

Tos Suntos, Bound Freedom, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 120 x 150 cm Visually, Tos Suntos has developed a distinctive language. He weaves together traditional Thai motifs, mythological figures, and symbols from popular culture, merging them into compositions that feel both familiar yet new and estranged. Rather than denouncing adaptation or imitation, he presents them with quiet clarity, acknowledging their underlying existence in daily life. The exhibition does not claim to offer solutions for freedom. Instead, it creates a space of reflection through its visual propositions. As the artist notes: “This series of works does not judge right or wrong but invites viewers to reconsider themselves within these invisible structures.” In this openness, his work transcends personal narrative and becomes a site for audiences to project their own experiences.
Ultimately, Tos Suntos’ practice unfolds as both an intimate dialogue with the self and a structural probing of the collective subconscious. While rooted in the cultural soil of Thailand, his art speaks to dilemmas that resonate more broadly today: the tension between faith and doubt, structure and freedom, the individual and the system. By opening up the very frameworks we often take as fixed—such as faith, culture, and class— Tos Suntos reveals what lies beneath them, not certainties, but the unexamined unknowns.
Venue
Tang Contemporary Art Bangkok, Room 201 – 206, River City Bangkok, 23 Soi Charoenkrung 24, Talad Noi, Sampantawong, Bangkok, 10100Artist
Tos SuntosExhibition Dates
October 18 – November 23, 2025Gallery Hours
Tuesday – Sunday | 11 AM – 7 PMWebsite
https://www.tangcontemporary.com/Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/tangcontemporaryartbangkok/Contact
bkk@tangcontemporary.com
About Artist
Tos Suntos (Panyawat Phitaksawan) (b. 1992, Bangkok, Thailand) is a Thai Artist and Designer known for his unconventional style applied to both his 2D and 3D creations, expressed in a variety of forms such as painting, digital art, collages and sculptures. His works have evolved through time, but consistently combine elements of Thai culture or traditions, with more contemporary and universal elements of monsters and pop culture.
The artist first gained increased recognition when he was commissioned to create works for the Adidas Headquarters, as a representative of Thailand. His work has always reflected modern culture and lifestyle, combined with his experience and childhood memories. When he was young, Tos Suntos was interested in sci-fi films and other worldly creatures, bringing him to incorporate these elements in his work, combined with observations of pop culture and retro styles.
About Gallery
Since its founding in Bangkok in 1997, Tang Contemporary Art has opened 8 spaces in Beijing, Hong Kong, Bangkok, Seoul and Singapore to promote the development of experimental art in different regions. In the past 28 years, Tang Contemporary Art has organized groundbreaking exhibitions in its gallery spaces, and also cooperated with important art institutions in China and abroad to accomplish outstanding art projects. The gallery strives to initiate dialogue between artists, curators, collectors and institutions working both locally and internationally. A roster of groundbreaking exhibitions has earned Tang Contemporary Art internationally renowned recognition, establishing its status as a pioneer of the contemporary art scene in Asia.As one of China’s most influential contemporary art platforms, Tang Contemporary Art maintains a high standard of exhibition programming. Tang Contemporary Art represents or collaborates with leading figures in international contemporary art, including Ai Weiwei, Huang Yongping, Shen Yuan, Zhu Jinshi, Chen Danqing, Liu Qinghe, Liu Xiaodong, Chen Shaoxiong, Wang Yuping, Shen Ling, Shen Liang, Wu Yi, Xia Xiaowan, He Duoling, Mao Xuhui, Wang Huangsheng, Yang Jiechang, Tan Ping, Wang Du,Yan Lei, Yue Minjun, Wang Jianwei, Yangjiang Group, Zheng Guogu, Lin Yilin, Sun Yuan&Peng Yu, Qin Ga, Wang Qingsong, Yin Zhaoyang, Feng Yan, Guo Wei, Chen Wenbo, Ling Jian, Qin Qi, Yang Yong, Peng Wei, He An, Zhao Zhao, Xu Qu, Chen Yujun, Chen Yufan, Xue Feng, Cai Lei, Li Qing, Wang Sishun, Xu Xiaoguo, Lí Wei, Liu Yujia, Wu Wei, Yang Bodu, You Yong, Li Erpeng, Jade Ching-yuk Ng, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Adel Abdessemed, Niki de Saint Phalle, AES+F , Michael Zelehosk, Jonas Burgert, Christian Lemmerz, Michael Kvium, Sakarin Krue-On, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Natee Utarit, Kitti Narod, Gongkan, Entang Wiharso, Heri Dono, Nam June Paik, Park Seungmo, Jae Yong Kim, Diren Lee, Dinh Q. Lê, Rodel Tapaya, Jigger Cruz, Ayka Go, Raffy Napay, H.H.Lim, Etsu Egami, etc.
(Text and images courtesy of Tang Contemporary Art)
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P21 Presents Gonna Build a Mountain and Daydream, a Solo Exhibition by So Young Park

Poster credit: P21 P21 presents Gonna Build a Mountain and Daydream, a solo exhibition by So Young Park, opening on October 10. Her second solo exhibition with the gallery features twelve new works, including a large-scale installation, alongside smaller canvases. Through a visual language rooted in impulse and sensation, the exhibition evokes a longing for worlds beyond immediate experience.
Rather than following narrative or figuration, Park reveals the emergence of images through aesthetic collisions and layered surfaces. Vivid colors, spontaneous gestures, and a distinctive formal vocabulary coalesce into compositions where organic curves and geometric shapes intertwine. These scenes do not represent a singular landscape, but stir feelings of the familiar and the strange, like echoes of memory. While mythical creatures or sublime terrains such as mermaids, dragons, or Machu Picchu are never directly depicted, their presence is suggested through chromatic and formal associations, inviting projections from the viewer’s imagination.
So Young Park, Kashmir, 2025, Mixed media on canvas, 91 x 72.7 cm The images move fluidly between form and formlessness, becoming metaphors for intangible emotions—water, air, and clouds— that defy clear definition. Some areas suggest a yearning for an unreachable world or an irretrievable past, while scattered geometric and fragmented shapes allude to temporality, emotional detachment, and fatigue with the constructed order of civilization. These contrasting visual languages generate internal tension yet extend the pictorial space through juxtaposed color and texture.
Park merges traditional oil painting with contemporary materials, using metallic pigments and spray techniques to achieve tonal richness and compositional harmony. Her unique palette—at times reminiscent of traditional Korean hanbok—functions as a sensory device that facilitates emotional movement and diffusion. Her process balances control and spontaneity: deliberate structure is overlaid with physical interventions such as splattering and layering, capturing emotional shifts and the unpredictable flow of material.
So Young Park, Millions of Horizons, 2025, Mixed media on canvas, Dimensions variable Gonna Build a Mountain and Daydream proposes an imaginative act of surrender—a release from logic and unreachable expectations. Through layered brushstrokes and chromatic friction, Park scatters particles of emotion that resist verbal translation, encouraging viewers to playfully engage with them. Her work suggests a quiet but resilient mode of survival—one that preserves interior movement amid the constraints of modern life.
Venue
66 Hoenamu-ro, Yongsan-gu, SeoulArtist
So Young ParkExhibition Dates
October 10 – November 9, 2025Gallery Hours
Tuesday – Friday | 11 AM – 6 PM
Saturday | 12 – 6 PMWebsite
https://p21.kr/Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/p21.kr/Contact
info@p21.krAbout Artist
So Young Park (b. 1971) explores the process of image formation through bold color palettes, simplified forms, and spontaneous gestures. Her layered compositions—interweaving organic curves and geometric structures—move freely between figuration and abstraction, memory and imagination, evoking unconscious sensations in the viewer. By combining traditional oil painting techniques with contemporary materials, her work experiments with the materiality and visuality of painting, offering a sensory bridge between emotion and perception that resists linguistic translation.
She graduated from Universität der Künste Berlin led by Professor Daniel Richter. Recent solo exhibitions include P21, Seoul (2023); Frontviews, Berlin (2022); Project Space Sarubia, Seoul (2021); Hapjungjigu, Seoul (2018); Till Richter Museum, Germany (2017); and Gallery E105, Germany (2011). She has also participated in numerous group exhibitions, including at PODIUM, Hong Kong (2024); Kunstverein Göttingen, Germany (2024); Chapter NY, New York (2024); Simone Subal Gallery, New York (2023); Uferhallen, Berlin (2022); Art Space 3, Seoul (2019); Bethanien, Berlin (2019); El Segundo Museum of Art, USA (2016).
Her works are held in major public and private collections, including the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (MMCA), Art Bank, El Segundo Museum of Art, the Robin and Alfredo Trento Collection, and the Segler-Uleer Collection in Germany.
About Gallery
Established in September 2017 in Itaewon, Seoul, P21 has been dedicated to showcasing 21st-century contemporary art by meticulously selecting both established and promising emerging artists. The gallery initially operated in two independent spaces, P1 and P2, each encouraging artworks that reflect the contrasting characteristics of these spaces and providing opportunities for artists to realize new ideas inspired by the gallery environment.
In February 2024, P21 moved to a new location just 100 meters from the original space. This new space marks not only a physical relocation but also the beginning of a new chapter, presenting a wider range of in-depth exhibitions and continuing to enhance its international presence through active collaboration with domestic and international institutions and participation in major international art fairs. Additionally, P21 seeks to introduce ambitious projects by renowned international artists to the domestic audience, aiming to build a balanced and dynamic program.
(Text and images courtesy of P21)
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No Idea Gallery Presents The Weight of Light, a Solo Exhibition by Kei Meguro

Poster credit: No Idea Gallery The Weight of Light is Kei Meguro’s solo exhibition exploring the delicate tension between light and shadow, fragility and strength, sorrow and beauty. Through her photorealistic graphite drawings, Meguro captures fleeting emotions, childhood innocence, and the quiet presence of nature. The show features a new collection of works, debut of limited edition prints titled The Weight of Light, and curated archival pieces from past collections.

The Weight of Light, Exhibition view, Courtesy of No Idea Gallery This exhibition marks Meguro’s return to Hong Kong, where she spent part of her childhood, and invites viewers to pause in the in-between space where chaos meets calm and resilience blooms.
Venue
No Idea Gallery, Suite 1703, Chinachem Hollywood Centre, 1-13 Hollywood Road, Central, Hong KongArtist
Kei MeguroExhibition Dates
October 10 – November 9, 2025Gallery Hours
Tuesday – Sunday | 12 – 7 PM (Closed on Mondays)Website
https://noideagallery.com/Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/noideagallery/?hl=enAbout Artist

Kei Meguro is a Japanese artist based between Tokyo and Brooklyn. She graduated from the School of Visual Arts in New York with a BFA in Graphic Design. Her work is known for its intricate, photorealistic style created using pencil and graphite, often with subtle touches of color.
Meguro’s art explores themes of identity, psychology, and emotional nuance. Her ability to capture delicate details and inner worlds has led to collaborations with global brands such as Adobe, HBO, New Balance, and Tiffany & Co. She has exhibited in galleries worldwide and shared her creative insights at events like Adobe MAX and Apple workshops.
(Text and images courtesy of No Idea Gallery)
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Interview | Philadelphia and Pittsburgh-based Artist sāgar kāmath
sāgar kāmath is an interdisciplinary artist working between mediums of painting, sculpture, installation, sound, video, collage, public art, and dance. His practice investigates the multiplicities of his identities as an Indian-born American through narrative building, materiality, line, space, and movement. His research-based methodology simultaneously interrogates his body, the surrounding landscape, and colonial histories through the engagement of non-linear time.
sāgar’s art education began at a young age with his father and continued through his time at Pittsburgh CAPA 6-12. sāgar received his Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering at the University of Pittsburgh and his Master of Fine Arts in Multidisciplinary Art at the Maryland Institute College of Art, Mount Royal School of Art. sāgar has had exhibitions and performances in Pittsburgh, Raleigh, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Providence, New York, and Washington DC. In May 2023, sāgar was invited as an Artist-in-Residence for the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Asian Art’s Centennial celebration.

Birth of Night, embraced by Blue and Red, 2024, Acrylic, AB crystals, hemp twine, grommeted hemp canvas, 80 x 80 in Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
It seems silly to say I have always been an artist, but I feel like that’s true. My father, Ravindra Kamath, is an artist and I started painting alongside him very early on. I continued my arts education at my middle and high school, Pittsburgh CAPA 6-12, where I majored in Visual Arts. After graduating, I attended the University of Pittsburgh for civil engineering but was able to continue learning through the arts department there. I graduated in 2020 and made a pivot during the COVID-19 pandemic to pursue my MFA at the Maryland Institute College of Art and graduated in 2023.
Ballad of a lost Vessel, 2024, Watercolor, India ink on waxed Khadi cotton rag paper, 22 x 30 in How do you stay inspired and motivated to create new work?
I think I have had many different relationships with my art practice. While I was in engineering school, making art seemed like a form of defiance and survival. In grad school, my practice turned more academic and research-driven. But more recently I have been thinking of my art practice as a form of documentation or reflection about myself. I also don’t make work at an even pace. I am an all or nothing artist, where I will make 10 pieces quickly over a period of a few weeks, or I won’t look at my studio space for a couple months. I am often inspired by traveling and discovering new things, but also I get inspiration from pop culture and media, conversations with friends, and reading.
Lifecycle of Myth: the instability of Space & finding abundance at the threshold of Time, Series of Sculptures presented at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Asian Art for the 2023 Centennial Celebration, Bamboo, banana leaves, hempcrete, twine How has your artistic style evolved over time?
I think my artistic style will be ever evolving. I am not sure if I will end up as an artist with a specific style, but I think I value similar characteristics, such as line quality or color choice, across mediums.How do you select colors for a piece? Are they symbolic?
Color selection is critical to my work. I am usually considering the relationship between the piece and the viewer. I love saturation and intensity of the pigment. I think a lot about the relationship with my paintings and the digital screen. More recently, I have been thinking about the relationship between my work and the natural environment, so that has led me on a journey of earth tones, inks, and natural pigments.
NIGHT II, 2024, Giclée print on sugarcane paper, 14 in x 11 in, Edition of 5 Do you work intuitively, or do you plan compositions in advance? How do you know when a piece is finished?
It depends on the piece. I think I have a deep emotional connection with the work. Sometimes I sketch, or collage to inform the painted or sculpted works. But sometimes it is more intuitive and feels like a performance. I have “domestic disputes” with my paintings, where we go through periods of working together, but also have times working in opposition. The piece usually tells me when it’s finished. I have to enter a very specific headspace to create work, maybe even approaching the work as a character or alter-ego. Once I leave that headspace, I find it pretty challenging to return and therefore I accept the work as completed.
Lifecycle of a Myth I, 2022, Acrylic on banana leaves, Variable dimensions What’s next for you? Any upcoming projects or directions you’re eager to share?
Murals are calling! I have been involved in a couple mural projects in Pittsburgh and Philadelphia. I am currently working on one for the Philadelphia Opera that should be completed by October 2025.
Also, I am creating work for a 2026 exhibition with Twelve Gates Arts in Old City neighborhood of Philadelphia, PA which will open in May 2026.Text & photo courtesy of sāgar kāmath

Website: https://www.sagarkamath.com
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/sog_r
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Anant Art Presents Holding Space as Radical Persistence at The Armory Show 2025

Bushra Waqas Khan, Frangipani, 2025, Silk and Swarovski crystals, Copyright Bushra Waqas Khan (2025), Courtesy of Anant Art Space is never neutral—it is shaped by histories, memories, and power structures that dictate who belongs and who is rendered invisible. Holding Space brings together a group of artists whose works negotiate the act of claiming, preserving, and reconfiguring space—whether physical, political, or emotional.
Through diverse mediums, the artists in this presentation explore sites of resistance, personal geographies, and the fragile balance between presence and erasure. Some reclaim narratives of land and displacement, challenging imposed borders and silenced histories. Others carve out intimate sanctuaries within fractured realities, asserting the body as a site of agency and protest.
In a world where spaces are contested—whether through state control, climate displacement, or shifting identities—this booth examines the quiet yet radical act of ‘holding space’, inviting viewers to consider what it means to stand one’s ground, to remember, and to remain.

Vikrant Bhise, They Made Us Wear It, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, Copyright Vikrant Bhise (2025), Courtesy of Anant Art Probir Gupta’s monumental assemblages confront systemic violence, displacement, and institutionalised marginalisation. His practice draws from his time in Paris among immigrant communities and his engagement with leftist politics in Bengal. Through overwhelming, grand-scale paintings, Gupta constructs ideological frames that interrogate power, oppression, and erasure. His works demand reflection on contested spaces and who is allowed to belong in contemporary society.

Probir Gupta, Love Story, 2025, Wood, Iron & Paper, Copyright Probir Gupta (2025), Courtesy of Anant Art Vikrant Bhise’s practice is rooted in Ambedkarite consciousness, interrogating caste-based oppression through monumental scrolls, multi-panelled paintings, and intimate ink drawings. His compositions draw from histories of resistance, invoking the radicality of Mexican muralists while embedding the struggles of marginalised communities in contemporary India. Bhise’s figures are never passive; they rupture hegemonic narratives, asserting agency through memory, dissent, and the power of collective action. His works engage with personal and public archives, dismantling dominant aesthetics to reveal a political landscape shaped by exclusion, labour, and resilience—an urgent act of reclamation within contested visual histories.

Vikrant Bhise, Claimed, 2025, Oil on canvas, Copyright Vikrant Bhise (2025), Courtesy of Anant Art Bushra Waqas Khan reimagines state-issued affidavit papers—symbols of legal authority and patriarchal control—as intricate, layered compositions that dismantle their power. Her sculptural works transform bureaucratic insignia into poetic acts of defiance, using repetition, printmaking, and textile techniques to subvert inherited structures of control. At The Armory Show 2025, Khan’s sculptural forms would offer an interplay between materiality and meaning, challenging hierarchies while celebrating the resilience of overlooked symbols.

Bushra Waqas Khan, Bleeding Heart, 2025, Organza and Silk, Copyright Bushra Waqas Khan (2025), Courtesy of Anant Art To ‘hold space’ is an act of defiance, a refusal to be erased. The artists in this presentation reclaim space—physical, institutional, and ideological—where they have been historically excluded. Whether through Probir Gupta’s monumental interrogations of displacement, Vikrant Bhise’s Ambedkarite resistance, or Bushra Waqas Khan’s subversion of bureaucratic control, each artist disrupts inherited structures of power.
These works challenge the colonial frameworks that dictated who could occupy museums and archives, who was deemed worthy of representation, and whose histories were preserved. They unravel casteist and patriarchal exclusions, asserting agency over narratives that have long been controlled by others. At The Armory Show 2025, this booth attempts to be a moment of resistance, a space held open for voices that have persisted despite every attempt to silence them.

Probir Gupta, The Whitewash, 2025, Photographic print, acrylic, axides, and iron bar, Copyright Probir Gupta (2025), Courtesy of Anant Art Address
The Armory Show 2025 _ Booth 204, Javits Center 429 11th Avenue New York, NY 10001Artist
Bushra Waqas Khan, Probir Gupta, Vikrant BhiseExhibition Dates
September 4, 2025 (VIP Preview)
September 5 – 7, 2025Website
https://www.anantart.com/Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/anantartgallery/Contact
neeraj@anantart.comAbout Gallery
Established in 2004 by Mamta Singhania, Anant Art has played a vital role in shaping contemporary South Asian art. From the outset, the gallery championed innovative practices, supporting artists like Raqs Media Collective, Rashid Rana, and Bharti Kher. After a strategic hiatus, Anant Art returned in 2017 with a renewed vision, expanding its global footprint while fostering critical discourse. Its artists, including Vikrant Bhise, Dhara Mehrotra, and Ghulam Mohammad, have gained recognition at institutions like ICA Miami, Harvard University, and the Victoria & Albert Museum. As one of the few Indian galleries representing voices across the region, Anant Art remains dedicated to cultivating cross-border dialogues and expanding contemporary art’s evolving narratives.
(Text and images courtesy of Anant Art)
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Johyun Gallery Presents Representative Works by Five Artists at The Armory Show 2025

Lee Bae, Brushstroke A4, 2025, Bronze, 86 x 95 x 68 cm The Armory Show 2025 will be held at the Javits Center in New York from September 4 (Thu), with a VIP Preview, through September 5 (Fri) to September 7 (Sun). Johyun Gallery will present representative works by five artists—Lee Bae, Kim Taek Sang, Kishio Suga, Kang Kang Hoon, and Lee So Yeon—spanning sculpture, painting, and installation, proposing a visual dialogue between East Asian and Western contemporary art. This presentation unfolds contemporary reflections on matter, sensation, and existence through the material experiments and distinctive visual languages each artist has developed over many years. Furthermore, within a single space, the works of these five artists, each rooted in different cultural and historical contexts, intersect to reveal both the differences and resonances of their formal vocabularies, as well as the convergences and divergences in their artistic attitudes.

Kishio Suga, Site of Void, 2011, Wood, acrylic, 69.8 x 55.8 x 8.2 cm Lee Bae presents new works from his Brushstroke painting series, alongside sculptures and his Issu du Feu series. Since settling in France in 1989, he has developed a practice that traverses painting and sculpture, with charcoal—condensing both the life and extinction of wood—as his central medium. In Issu du Feu, cut pieces of charcoal are meticulously arranged and polished into dense compositions; other works layer powdered charcoal and medium into thick, textured surfaces; while the Brushstroke series channels the natural, cyclical energy of charcoal into sweeping gestures, embodying the vitality of the artist’s hand. His bronze sculptures, in turn, compress the residual energy of fire and carbonization, translating the forces of nature into artistic form.
Kim Taek Sang unveils Flows-25-9, a new work shaped by the non-human elements of water, pigment, light, and time. In his process, diluted pigment is repeatedly poured and dried over canvases laid flat on the floor, gradually producing stratified layers and subtle intervals, where faintly absorbed colors generate delicate vibrations. Over the past three decades, this meditative and performative approach has culminated in his distinctive body of work he terms dàm-hwa(“faint painting”), a pictorial world that organically interweaves nature, medium, and concept.

Kim Taek Sang, Flows-25-9, 2025, Water acrylic on canvas, 200 x 196 x 4 cm Kishio Suga, a seminal figure of the Mono-ha (School of Things) movement, has long explored the interrelations of matter, space, and time by situating unprocessed materials such as wood, metal, and stone in spatial relationships. Since co-founding Mono-ha with contemporaries in the late 1960s, he has moved fluidly between outdoor installations and indoor works, visualizing tensions that arise at the thresholds of presence and absence, and at the boundaries where materials meet. For this presentation, Suga will exhibit the assemblage work Site of Void, continuing the sculptural language that he has recently developed through his major solo exhibitions at Dia Beacon and in Chelsea, New York.
Kang Kang Hoon captures moments where memory and emotion intersect through his portrait After Sunset and a new work featuring a cotton motif, Cotton. His gestural brushwork, tactile textures, restrained depiction, and nuanced play of light convey the emotions condensed within the figures and objects on canvas.

Kang Kang Hoon, After Sunset, 2025, Oil on canvas, 145.5 x 112cm Lee So Yeun introduces her distinctive self-portrait series, in which personal objects such as glasses, hats, and headbands are juxtaposed with the figure. In her canvases, objects and persons become one another’s portraits, rendering fragments of memory and fluid identities into painterly form. For this presentation in particular, Johyun Gallery departs from a conventional white-cube staging and instead emphasizes the artist’s narrative by placing Black Mask at the center of the installation.
At The Armory Show, Johyun Gallery will present to New York audiences a multifaceted spectrum of contemporary art surrounding materiality, sensation, and existence, articulated through the diverse media and visual thinking of five artists. Each work asserts a strong presence on its own, yet together within the booth they generate cross-references and visual rhythms that coalesce into an integrated artistic experience. Through this, viewers encounter not only the individual narratives embedded in each work, but also the multidimensional landscape of contemporary art collectively shaped by their convergence.

Lee So Yeun, Black Mask, 2024, Oil on canvas, 130 x 97 cm Opening Hours
September 4, 11:00 – 20:00 (VIP Preview)
September 5 – 6, 11:00 – 19:00
September 7 11:00 – 18:00Address
The Armory Show 2025 _ Booth 401, Javits Center 429 11th Avenue New York, NY 10001Artist
Lee Bae, Kim Taek Sang, Kishio Suga, Kang Kang Hoon, and Lee So YeonExhibition Dates
September 4 – 7, 2025Website
https://www.johyungallery.comInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/johyungallery/Contact
press@johyungallery.com
+82 10 3550 1170(Text and images courtesy of Johyun Gallery)
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AAEF Art Center Presents Cotton Cloth, a Solo Exhibition by Tsuyoshi Maekawa

This autumn in Shanghai, the AAEF Art Center will present the exhibition Cotton Cloth, a comprehensive survey of over seventy years of artistic practice by second-generation Gutai artist Tsuyoshi Maekawa, tracing the trajectory of his work and providing a key case study for the research of the Kansai-based Gutai Art Association (GUTAI) active in the 1950s. Through 52 works, the exhibition showcases Maekawa’s distinctive approach—transforming coarse-textured cloth into folds and creases that undulate into patterns reminiscent of classical motifs and natural forms, channeling their inherent force and beauty. His unique technique transforms painting into a “life field,” embodying the Gutai principle of “direct dialogue with matter.”

130304, 2013, Burlap, acrylic, oil, 65.0 x 76.5 cm Since the mid-20th century, postwar Japanese art has undergone a dramatic shift from traditional constraints to avant-garde experimentation. Founded in 1954 by Jiro Yoshihara, the Gutai Art Association emerged as a central force in this transformation, advocating the creation of “what has never been done before” and exemplifying the artist’s freedom of spirit. Born in 1936, Maekawa began studying under Yoshihara in 1959, and debuted in the 8th Gutai Exhibition at the Kyoto Municipal Museum of Art. He officially joined the Gutai Art Association in 1963 and held his first solo exhibition at the Gutai Pinacotheca. As one of the representative figures of Gutai’s second generation—together with Takesada Matsutani and Shuji Mukai—Maekawa was nicknamed “3M” for the shared initial of their surnames. In 1966, the three held a joint exhibition in the same space. Until the dissolution of the Association in 1972 following Yoshihara’s death, Maekawa remained an active participant in every Gutai exhibition.

160431, 1984, Hemp cloth, sew, acrylic, 92.0 x 131.0 x 4 cm During the Gutai period, Maekawa adopted coarse burlap as his primary medium, harnessing the raw material energy of the fabric while also addressing the pictorial properties of his works. He cut, gathered, and stitched the burlap, or adhered it with Bond adhesive, stretching and flattening the gathered edges to create aerial, topographical forms. In terms of color, he maximized the interplay between the material’s tactile surface and painterly expression by splashing, dripping, and staining oil paint across the textured burlap. This approach amplified the material’s natural resilience and malleability, producing works imbued with both strength and fluidity—evocative of the rhythms of earth and nature, and suggestive of meandering riverbeds or the veins of leaves. Structurally and formally, his works also resonate with the bold, primitive patterns of Japan’s Jōmon-period ceramics, revealing an aesthetic grounded in raw and weighty beauty.

2209006, 2022, Burlap, acrylic, oil, 162.5 x 131.0 x 13 cm After the Gutai group disbanded in 1972, Maekawa entered a transitional phase, abandoning his earlier style. He adopted lighter fabrics, drastically reduced his use of color, and turned to exploring the physical elasticity of the cloth itself—transforming this property into a calmer, more geometric abstract sensibility. In the 2000s, he made a radical break from his signature gathered-and-stitched technique, creating new paintings where folds, protrusions, and negative space together constructed the pictorial image. In recent years, even in his ninth decade, the artist has maintained remarkable creative vitality. His works have returned to an emphasis on material essence, becoming more minimal and transcendental, and even breaking personal boundaries by experimenting with techniques associated with fellow second-generation Gutai artist Takesada Matsutani—something, Maekawa humorously admits, he would never have dared during Yoshihara’s lifetime.

2505005, 2025, Cotton cloth, sew, acrylic, 60.5 x 72.5 x 5 cm This exhibition presents works spanning from 1965 to the present, with a focus on significant pieces created after the dissolution of Gutai. It examines the evolution and development of Maekawa’s practice in the post-Gutai era, outlining a path of relentless self-renewal. His trust in the inherent nature of materials and his continual pushing of personal limits vividly exemplify the Gutai spirit of “doing what no one has done before.” The exhibition not only addresses Maekawa’s enduring inquiries into the “boundaries of painting” and the “life of matter,” but also proposes the creative trajectory of “from opposition to coexistence with matter,” offering new perspectives and dimensions for understanding the development of contemporary art in Asia.

2409004, 2024, Hemp cloth, oil, 162.0 x 130.0 x 3.5 cm Venue
8 Building, No. 334 Jiulong Road,
Zhujiajiao Town, Qingpu District, Shanghai, ChinaArtist
Tsuyoshi MAEKAWAExhibition Dates
September 13 – December 15, 2025Gallery Hours
Tuesday – Sunday | 11 AM – 7 PMWebsite
https://aaefartcenter.artInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/aaef_artcentre/Contact
aaef@shunartdesign.comAbout Artist

Tsuyoshi Maekawa was a prominent member of the Gutai Art Association during its most active years. In 1959, he began studying under Jiro Yoshihara and made his debut at the 8th Gutai Art Exhibition held at the Kyoto Municipal Museum of Art. He officially joined the Gutai Art Association in 1962, and the following year held his first solo exhibition at the Gutai Pinacotheca. Until the death of founder Jiro Yoshihara and the dissolution of the association in 1972, Maekawa remained an active participant in every Gutai exhibition.
Unlike many of his peers in the group whose works leaned toward Abstract Expressionism, Maekawa—belonging to the second generation of Gutai—focused more intently on exploring the tactile qualities of materials. Using coarse cloth (hemp or cotton) as his primary medium, he took advantage of its combination of tensile strength and malleability to create surfaces that were at once boldly sculptural and fluidly expansive, imbuing his works with a rich sense of texture and expression.
Following the disbandment of Gutai, Maekawa continued to expand upon his earlier methods. Replacing burlap with softer fabrics, he incorporated machine stitching to produce intricately structured surfaces, further enhancing the spatial depth and material complexity of his paintings. This body of work earned him numerous prestigious awards throughout the 1980s and secured his position as a significant figure in the history of contemporary Japanese art.
Maekawa’s works are held in major public collections, including the National Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto; the National Museum of Art, Osaka; the Miyagi Museum of Art; the Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum; the Hyōgo Prefectural Museum of Modern Art; the Wakayama Museum of Modern Art; the Ashiya City Museum of Art and History (Hyōgo); the Takamatsu City Museum of Art (Kagawa); the Osaka City Museum of Modern Art; the Hikami Town Museum of Art (Hyōgo); the Hasegawa Contemporary Art Museum (Shizuoka); the Hirayama Ikuo Museum of Art (Shiga); and related institutions in Ube City. His work is also represented in important museum collections in the United States, France, the Netherlands, Australia, and beyond, reflecting his broad international recognition.
About Gallery
AAEF Art Center officially opened to the public on November 11, 2023. Located in the historic water town of Zhujiajiao—often referred to as the “Venice of Shanghai”—the center occupies a repurposed industrial building of approximately 2,800 square meters, complete with a garden and rooftop space.
As an experimental art venue, AAEF Art Center is dedicated to the research, education, and cultural lineage of contemporary Asian art. The center organizes and hosts a diverse range of events, including art festivals, film screenings, rooftop music festivals, anime conventions, tea gatherings, and design and antique markets, fostering a vibrant platform for creative exchange and cultural dialogue.
(Text and images courtesy of AAEF ART CENTER)
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City Gazes: Dialogues Across New York and Busan
From June 8–14, 2025 (New York) and June 18–22, 2025 (South Korea), City Gazes: Artistic Perspectives on Place—presented by Asian Art Contemporary in collaboration with Kyungsung University in Busan, South Korea and A Space Gallery in Brooklyn, New York—launched its dual-city exhibition.

Poster Credit: Asian Art Contemporary A city is more than a physical space; it is a mirror of lived experience, cultural intersections, and identity. Co-curated by Webson Ji and Ju Hyun Kim, the exhibition brings together 15 Asian and Asian diaspora artists whose unique perspectives reimagine the perception and interpretation of urban and regional landscapes. Participating artists include Abhishek Tuiwala, Ami Park, Chengtao Yi, Doi Kim, Hee Jeong An, Hyunju Lee, Jinwoo Moon, Jun Ho Kim, Minjung Kim, Mok Ji Soo, Paul Mok, PTPC, Sao Tanaka, Xianglong Li, and Xiangni Song.

City Gazes: Artistic Perspectives on Place, Exhibition view, Courtesy of A Space Gallery Through a wide range of artistic practices, City Gazes captures the subtle textures of urban life—from fleeting everyday moments to profound reflections on memory, migration, and belonging. Whether expressed through painting, photography, installation, or mixed media, the works invite viewers to reconsider the evolving symbiosis between people and place. In New York, the industrial setting of A Space Gallery offers a sharp contemporary frame, while in Busan, the academic atmosphere of Kyungsung University Art Museum provides a distinct interpretive lens. This dual-city format itself embodies the exhibition’s theme of “multiple perspectives,” encouraging visitors to reflect on both the diversity of artistic expression across cultural contexts and the shared emotional connections that transcend them.

City Gazes: Artistic Perspectives on Place, Exhibition view, Courtesy of A Space Gallery Through the lenses of these Asian and Asian diaspora artists, we encounter a multiplicity of urban narratives—nostalgic, critical, celebratory—that together form a composite portrait of cities as more than landscapes: they are strata of history, sites of transformation, and stages for creative expression.

City Gazes: Artistic Perspectives on Place, Exhibition view, Courtesy of A Space Gallery Sculptor Abhishek Tuiwala works across metal forging, woodworking, installation, and graphite drawing. By deconstructing everyday objects and reconstructing them into satirical narratives, he bridges the figurative and abstract to address themes of identity, cultural translation, and migration. His graphite drawings extend this language of fragmentation and reassembly, transforming object forms to reflect the cultural fractures of migrant communities. Chengtao Yi explores the cultural evolution of man-made objects and systems through painting, sculpture, and digital media, examining the technological and perceptual mechanisms that shape meaning in the interplay of the virtual and the real. Sao Tanaka, born in Tokyo and now based in New York, studied Japanese Painting at Tama Art University, earned an MA in Social Anthropology at Hitotsubashi University, and continued her studies at the School of Visual Arts. Inspired by myth, her works generate scenes from inorganic matter to investigate place and collective identity. She has received the POLA Art Foundation Overseas Study Grant (2024–2025) and the Shibuya Art Award (2019).

City Gazes: Artistic Perspectives on Place, Exhibition view, Courtesy of Kyungsung University Xianglong Li appropriates symbols from pop culture and internet imagery to reconstruct social events and everyday life through painting, video, and 3D animation. His satirical and absurd visual language imagines alternative narratives beyond mainstream discourse. Xiangni Song, based between Beijing and New York, earned a BFA in Illustration from the School of Visual Arts in 2016 and an MFA in Fine Arts from Pratt Institute in 2020. Moving fluidly between two- and three-dimensional media, she uses painting, drawing, and ceramics to explore identity, self-reflection, and the boundless possibilities of imagination.

City Gazes: Artistic Perspectives on Place, Exhibition view, Courtesy of Kyungsung University Korean artist Hee Jeong An draws on motifs of migratory birds and marine life to juxtapose Busan’s urban landscape with its natural environment, emphasizing the beauty of nature within the metropolis. Kim Min-jeong, a painter rooted in Busan, documents the cityscape with a focus on its shifting architecture and street textures, drawing inspiration directly from her urban surroundings. Mok Ji Soo meticulously documents and reinterprets Busan’s fading bathhouse culture, revealing its role as both a site of community and a contemplative space, renewing appreciation for this tradition. Jun Ho Kim uses Busan’s place names as portals to urban memory. Through his “Juno Tour” project, he revitalizes historical sites and builds a folklore database titled Freezer, transforming cold urban spaces into tangible gateways to collective history.

City Gazes: Artistic Perspectives on Place, Exhibition view, Courtesy of Kyungsung University Curators Webson Ji and Ju Hyun Kim have long been active in New York and Busan, promoting cross-cultural artistic exchange and advancing the global visibility of Asian artists. City Gazes is more than an exhibition—it is a dialogue across the Pacific. When New York’s urban tempo meets Busan’s harbor atmosphere, the works reveal not only the mirrored images of two cities but also a shared parable for all cities in the age of globalization: between memory and the future, between rootedness and fluidity, art remains both witness and poetic interpreter.
(Images & text courtesy of Asian Art Contemporary, A Space Gallery, and Kyungsung University. Text by Jianing Lu)
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Interview | Munich-Based Artist Youjin Yi
Youjin Yi (b. 1980, Gangneung, ROK) is a Munich-based painter whose work explores the concept of “background” (Hintergrund) as both a physical and psychological space. Her artistic path led her from initial studies at Sejong University in Seoul to Germany, where she attended the Akademie der Bildenden Künste München. During this formative period, she studied as a guest student with Leiko Ikemura at the Universität der Künste Berlin in 2008, before ultimately becoming a Meisterschülerin under the mentorship of Günther Förg in 2011.
Her process is deeply intuitive; working on the floor, she uses spontaneous, gestural brushstrokes to carve out forms from her subconscious and biography. The resulting dreamlike paintings feature ambiguous figures and landscapes that mediate between Eastern and Western philosophies. By blurring the lines between figure and ground, her work creates a meditative space that invites viewers to explore their own inner nature and layered sense of identity.
This distinct approach has garnered significant international recognition. Yi has held major solo exhibitions across Europe and Asia, with notable shows in Seoul (WOOSON GALLERY), Berlin (68projects by KORNFELD), Munich (BRITTA RETTBERG Galerie), Paris (Galerie Vazieux), and Zurich (Lemoyne Project). Her work has been presented at leading global art fairs such as The Armory Show, Art Basel Hong Kong, and UNTITLED ART Miami Beach, and she is the recipient of prestigious awards, including the 2023 Kiaf SEOUL Highlights Award and the working grant 2021 from Stiftung Kunstfonds. Affirming her growing institutional importance, her paintings have been acquired for the permanent collections of the SeMA – Seoul Museum of Art and the Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlungen in Munich. Her work and artistic journey are further documented in the monograph YOUJIN YI FUSION, published by VfmK Verlag für moderne Kunst.

Napping, 2024, Charcoal, oil, oil pastel on Korean paper Hanji, mounted on canvas, 40 x 50 cm, ©Youjin Yi, Courtesy of the Artist and WOOSON GALLERY Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
My artistic journey truly began with the thrill of self-discovery. As a child, winning school art contests with just a few worn-out pencils gave me my first taste of affirmation. But the pivotal moment came at twelve, when a teacher introduced me to Western techniques. As I drew a still life of apples, I suddenly understood perspective, the power to translate my vision into three dimensions. It felt like a profound confirmation of my ego, igniting an obsession that this was what I was meant to do.
However, my formal studies in Seoul felt stifling. A trip to Europe confirmed an intuition that Germany, with its “sober” character, was the right place for my artistic soul. This led to a life-changing decision to leave Korea.
Such a bold move was only possible because of my parents’ unique support. They had faced poverty and never had the chance to study, so their main wish was for their children to take responsibility for their own lives. As the second daughter, I was free from the traditional pressures placed on a son, which fostered a deep independence. We built trust on the simple principle that “my happiness is their happiness.” So, when I decided to leave for Germany, they didn’t intervene. Instead, they provided a “protective shield”. A loving, stable, and pressure-free environment where my artistic sensitivity could flourish. Their quiet faith in me was the greatest support I could have ever received.

Mask, 2013, Oil on canvas, 190 x 240 cm, ©Youjin Yi, Courtesy of the Artist My move wasn’t impulsive. I methodically learned German and toured art academies, but my choice of Munich was singular: I went there for Professor Günther Förg. The chance to learn from him was my sole aspiration. In his open studio, his persistent question “Where does it come from?” led to a lightning-like realization about the German word “Hintergrund,” or “background.” I understood he wasn’t asking about the back of the canvas, but the very source of my being: my subconscious, my biography, the unseen roots of my artistic world.
This dual meaning of “background” has become the cornerstone of my work. My process (gestural, intuitive, often carried out on the floor with the brush wielded like a knife) is a physical akin to carving into the canvas, as if to expose the invisible background of my inner life. Through this, I invite the raw energy of my own story to emerge, transforming into a living, breathing image.

Sparrows, 2023, Acrylic, oil on canvas, 250 x 190 cm, ©Youjin Yi, Courtesy of the Artist and KORNFELD Glerie Berlin What are the main themes or concepts you explore in your work?
The central concepts in my work are the ‘subconscious’ and the ‘background,’ which are inextricably linked. The ‘background’ in my work has a dual meaning. The physical canvas is a stage for the subconscious to unfold, but the true background is my inner world. I don’t paint nature by observing it; I paint from a “library of my heart,” reacting to a lifetime of accumulated sensations. My process delves beneath everyday logic to explore what resides in the profoundest depths, so the elements in my paintings are allusions, hinting at this unseen world rather than stating it explicitly.
This is why nature (especially animals) features so prominently in my work. I am drawn to their profound authenticity and innocence, qualities that often feel more genuine than those found in humans, and to the mystery of their unknowable consciousness. This mystery grants me a sense of freedom, and I often humanize them as a way of bridging that gap. I am equally fascinated by more complex symbols, whether they appear as beings, plants, or gestures, because they seem to reside deep within our collective subconscious, presenting a profound artistic challenge.
To access this inner world, my process is one of intuition and spontaneity. I don’t sketch beforehand because I don’t want the painting to be a mere technical execution of a plan. Laying the canvas on the floor forces me to use my entire body, making the spontaneous lines that emerge a direct expression of my body’s memory. This ensures the painting is not a static image, but a “trace” or an “event”. A living record of engagement. My work isn’t about painting a preconceived ‘thought,’ but about thinking and feeling through the very act of painting.

Plants, 2020, Oil, oil pastel on canvas, 180 x 160 cm, ©Youjin Yi, Courtesy of the Artist and WOOSON GALLERY How do you develop your artistic expression that mediates between the East and the West?
My entire artistic expression is a conscious mediation between East and West, a fusion that unfolds through my personal history, my physical technique, and the philosophical space I create for the viewer.
It begins with my biography. Leaving Korea for Munich forced me to see my own identity through the lens of another culture, deepening my understanding of both myself and the world. This journey is mirrored in my art, where fragmented, dreamlike landscapes serve as metaphors for an identity shaped by both inherited heritage and acquired experience. I intentionally blur the boundary between the natural and the artificial, creating ambiguous forms that reflect this ongoing path of self-discovery.
This bridge is built through a physical process that blends Eastern and Western philosophies. By painting on the floor, I rely on memory and spontaneity, a method that resonates deeply with East Asian art’s emphasis on intuition over rigid control. It frees me from a fixed perspective and allows me to engage with the canvas gesturally, using my entire body.
When the finished work is hung upright, it becomes an invitation. I use expressions of nature to invite viewers to discover their own inner nature. The result is a language of open ambiguity, where lines are not boundaries but openings, and the distinctions between figure and ground are deliberately blurred. I call this the “beauty of the void” a meditative space where meaning emerges from what is suggested, not what is explicitly shown.
Ultimately, my work seeks to capture identity not as something fixed, but as an ever-evolving convergence of past and present. It is an open space where belonging and exclusion can coexist, inviting viewers to explore their own layered states of connection with the world.

Schwalbe, 2021, Acrylic, oil, oil pastel on canvas, 200 x 260 cm, ©Youjin Yi, Courtesy of the Artist and KORNFELD Glerie Berlin There are recurring animal and human figures in your painting, which seem blurry and dreamlike. What do they mean to you?
That blurry, dreamlike quality is intentional. The figures in my work aren’t meant to carry specific symbols, but to evoke a sense of connection, mystery, and the fluid nature of identity itself.
They exist in a space of open ambiguity. This reflects my own journey of leaving Korea and seeing my identity through the lens of another culture. The way the figures blur the distinction between inside and outside mirrors this experience; their lines are openings, not boundaries, inviting a mutual exploration of what it means to be human. They are a visual metaphor for how identity is complex, fluid, and often lacks clear definition.

Merging with the Environment, 2024, Acrylic, oil, oil pastel on canvas, 140 x 100 cm, ©Youjin Yi, Courtesy of the Artist and WOOSON GALLERY With animal figures, I’m drawn to their profound authenticity, an innocence that can feel more genuine than that of humans. Yet their consciousness remains a mystery to us. This combination of genuineness and unknowability is deeply compelling. I often find myself humanizing them, perhaps as a way to bridge that gap and explore a universal desire for connection.
This dreamlike state is also a natural result of my physical process. Painting on the floor, I rely on memory and sensation rather than direct observation. The figures emerge from an inner, subconscious space, carrying with them the layered ambiguity and emotional weight of that origin.
Ultimately, whether human or animal, these figures act as conduits. They reflect my own journey of navigating belonging and exclusion, and they are intended to create a space where viewers can connect with their own sense of identity in a world where clear boundaries often dissolve.

The Spirit of the Pond, 2025, Acrylic, oil, oil pastel on canvas, 40 x 35 cm, ©Youjin Yi, Courtesy of the Artist and Jiwooheon Gallery What challenges have you faced as an artist, and how have you overcome them?
Perhaps my greatest challenge hasn’t been a single obstacle, but a continuous one: the act of balancing contradictory forces, much like a skillful tightrope walker. This challenge came into sharp focus during what I call my “second adolescence” in Germany.
In Korea, my identity was as natural as breathing. But being placed alone in a completely different culture forced me to ask fundamental questions about who I was. It was a challenging, liberating process of moving beyond the identity reflected back at me by society and discovering what was truly inherent to me, a kind of “reset process.”
Many might see the pull between two cultures as a conflict, but I learned to embrace it as a vibrant, dynamic balancing act. I overcame the challenge by reframing it. Life in Germany didn’t cause me to abandon my Korean roots; on the contrary, the distance allowed me to understand them more clearly than ever. It became a catalyst that constantly reaffirmed my core identity while simultaneously expanding it.
This internal resolution is manifested directly in my work. My artistic style became the playground where I could combine contradictions to create something new. The lines in my paintings are no longer boundaries but open passages. Figure and ground seep into one another, forming new relationships. Ultimately, the challenge was to find what was most “me” in the space between two worlds. I overcame it by realizing that my roots and my present are not in conflict but together nourish all my work in the fertile space where memory meets the present.

Plant Gesture, 2025, Graphite, oil pastel on Korean paper Hanji, 18 x 25.5 cm, ©Youjin Yi, Courtesy of the Artist and BRITTA RETTBERG Galerie What do you hope people take away from your art when they experience it?
Ultimately, I hope people take away not a specific message from me, but an invitation to discover something profound within themselves. My aim is to create a space for them to explore and connect with their own inner nature and fluid sense of identity.
To achieve this, I intentionally craft a world of open ambiguity. The lines are openings, not boundaries; figures and landscapes blur, encouraging a more fluid way of seeing. At the heart of this is a concept central to my work: “Qualia” the subjective, personal quality of an experience, like the unique “feel” of a color, which can’t be fully described in words. While I paint from my own qualia, I believe my subconscious is connected to a vast ocean we all share: the collective unconscious. The archetypes in my work (animals, figures, elements of nature) are fragments of universal sensation drawn up from this deep, shared ocean.

Entwined, 2020, Charcoal, acrylic on korean paper Hanji, 200 x 138 cm, ©Youjin Yi, Courtesy of the Artist and WOOSON GALLERY My creative process is a form of “active imagination”, a conscious dialogue with images that rise from within. I don’t sketch; I listen and wait for a moment of “synchronicity,” a meaningful coincidence when an inner image aligns with an accidental mark on the canvas to reveal a complete form. That moment of deep resonance is when the work feels most vividly alive to me.
I share this because my process is a model for what I hope the viewer experiences. When you stand before my work, I invite you not to ask “What is this?” but to quietly listen to what sensations, your very own qualia, the painting awakens within you. I hope you can engage in your own form of active imagination and discover a fleeting, luminous moment of synchronicity.
If my creative process is an endless questioning of my inner self, then the deep resonance you might feel is the most tender and beautiful answer the universe can send back.
Text & photo courtesy of Youjin Yi

Photo by Dirk Tacke, Courtesy of BRITTA RETTBERG Galerie Website: www.youjinyi.com
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/yiyoujin/
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Interview | Seoul-Based Artist Eunsi Jo
Eunsi Jo (b. 1999) is a Seoul-based painter whose works unfold like meticulously constructed codes and riddles. Through the use of symbols, signs, and diagrammatic forms, she visualizes complex narratives about the relationships between individuals and collectives, parts and wholes. The artist focuses on the “irresistible structures” of the world—such as family, the food chain, and natural disasters—that cannot be controlled by human will, as well as on the principle of “resemblance.” “In contemporary society,” she notes, “we exist both as integral individuals and as parts of a larger whole.” Her practice probes the meaning of being within this web of interdependence.

Hardboiled, 2025, Oil on panel, 25 x 70 cm Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?
My studio is currently located at Seoul, South Korea. The start of my artistic journey is closely -tied to my family background. Though I am no longer in touch with my father, he was a programmer and my uncle was a solo game developer, exposing me to a wide variety of games that now influence not only my habits and appearance but also the ways I construct compositions in my work. This led me to an interest in the inevitability of resemblance and
otherforces beyond our control. From there, my curiosity expanded to explore the relationships between part and whole, and between the individual and the collective.
Disressed Day, 2023, Oil on canvas, 162.2 x 112.1 cm What is the underlying logic and narrative embedded behind your painting? (e.g. the juxtaposition of symbols, signs, diagrammatic forms…)
My work explores the concepts of resemblance and inevitability to investigate the relationships between parts and wholes, and between individuals and communities. I construct visual narratives using symbols, signs, and diagrammatic forms, translating both natural and social laws—such as gravity, cycles of life and death, kinship, and cultural idioms—into a pictorial language. By layering these elements, I aim to reveal the invisible structures and forces that shape identity, inviting viewers to trace connections and construct meaning through their own inferences.
How has your artistic style evolved over time?
In my early practice, I focused on capturing irresistible forces found in natural disasters and phenomena, such as earthquakes, whirlwinds, and volcanic eruptions. Later, I began exploring the idea of resemblance, and more recently, I have expanded my themes to include conventions and proverbs. I am also experimenting with a wider range of approaches to installation work.

Scallywag, 2023, Oil on panel, 80 x 120 x 30 cm Can you describe a recent project or artwork that you are particularly proud of?
Among my recent works, I am most fond of a series consisting of Siblings Below and Siblings Above. In Siblings Above, ten eggs are depicted side by side in a single nest. Each egg is marked with a pattern corresponding to the numbers from zero to nine, as if they were siblings arranged from the eldest to the youngest. However, I wanted to suggest that the pattern (cardinal number) on each egg does not necessarily correspond to the order in which it is born (ordinal number).
In Siblings Below, ten beans are depicted. Some sprout, while others wither away, meeting different ends. Through this, I wanted to express that not all beans planted in the ground will grow, and that they do not necessarily sprout in the order they were sown.

Siblings Above, 2025, Oil on panel, 35 × 70 cm
Siblings Below, 2025, Oil on panel, 35 × 70 cmWhat challenges have you faced as an artist, and how have you overcome them?
I try to avoid working out of mere habit, as I always want my practice to feel alive and exploratory. One of the biggest challenges I face is when I want to experiment with new formats or approaches, yet nothing comes to mind. To move past these moments, I make a conscious effort to immerse myself in new experiences— by playing unfamiliar games, reading through encyclopedias, or cycling to neighborhoods I have never visited before. These encounters often spark unexpected ideas that eventually find their way into my work.

Chronicles of the Earth, 2025, Oil on panel, volcanic stone, 45 x 30 x 30 cm What do you hope people take away from your art when they experience it?
In my work, I assign distinct roles to each image that makes up the composition. They create narratives either on their own or in connection with others, which I see as resembling how we live—sometimes as part of something larger, and sometimes as a whole in ourselves. Through the worlds these images construct, I hope to invite viewers to reflect on the meaning of relationships within the systems that govern our lives, and to consider the attitude with which we navigate them. Ultimately, I wish to offer a moment of contemplation in which they can question the reason for their own existence.
Text & photo courtesy of Eunsi Jo

Website: https://eunsijo.com/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/reallygoodpoem/



