Video: Beautiful chaos: installations made from duct tape by a Korean artist
2024 Author: Richard Flannagan | [email protected]. Last modified: 2023-12-15 23:55
Korean artist Heeseop Yoon is the author of the most interesting installations. From a distance, they can be mistaken for careless drawings, hastily applied over the snow-white gallery walls. In fact, the artist uses black strips of duct tape. With their help, Yun seeks to recreate the endless chaos of things and objects that are stored in excess in the garage or basement of the house of almost every resident of a large city.
“In my work, I come across a rethinking of concepts such as“memory”and“space,”says the artist., all places where chaos and confusion often reign. Then, based on the photographs I already have, I sketch by hand. I do not use an eraser - my work is, in fact, a perception diary. If you look closely at the image, you can see how my vision of space changed during my work."
The work of the Korean woman was highly appreciated by critics and art lovers. Yoon is the recipient of numerous awards and prizes, and her work has been successfully exhibited in group and solo exhibitions in major art spaces in New York and Seoul, including the March Gallery; The Bronx Museum, Arario Gallery and many others. Yoon's work has appeared on the pages of NY ARTS Magazine, The Korea Times, The Segye Times, Time Out New York, Absolute Arts and many others.
The artist was born and raised in Seoul, Korea. She received her BA from Chung-ang University, a prestigious private university located in Yun's hometown. Later, after moving to the United States, she earned her master's degree from City College - the main and oldest college of the City University of New York (The City College, New York). Yoon currently lives and works in the United States.
Damien Gilley, an American artist from Portland, is also happy to play such games with space. Damien is the author of original installations, combining both sculptural elements and drawings. The influence of science fiction, non-Euclidean geometry and computer graphics creates a special visual space in which even a sophisticated viewer can hardly orientate.
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