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LANDAU CONTEMPORARY

AT 

GALERIE DOMINION

KWANG YOUNG CHUN

For additional information on any of these artworks, please contact the gallery

KWANG YOUNG CHUN BIO

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b. 1944

After starting his artistic career studying western painting, in particular Abstract Expressionism, Kwang Young Chun turned to the mulberry paper as a way to express his unique, Korean artistic voice.

The papers, taken from books that are often a hundred years old, have been touched by people from all walks of life. Over the years, these people – men and women, young and old – have left indelible fingerprints. Chun captures the spirit of these people and their varied voices in his series of Aggregations, a series he started working on in the 1990s. Today, he is recognized internationally for these sculptural forms.

 

The basis of his work is individual, triangular, Styrofoam shapes. Individually, these shapes are minuscule. Taken together, however, their visual impact is immense. This concept of the aggregate is what informs Chun’s work. The Styrofoam shapes are covered in Korean mulberry paper. In Korea, the paper is a mainstay and has many utilitarian uses from floor and window coverings to candy and medicinal wrappers.

It also resonates with personal meaning for the artist, who recalls trips to a herbalist as a small child. Medicines wrapped in mulberry paper hung from the ceiling of the shop, the paper protecting the contents from dampness and insects. Chun uses pages recycled from old books to cover the geometric forms. These pages are covered in Korean and Chinese characters, adding another layer of cultural and personal meaning. He hand-ties the paper over each shape, twisting pages into a string to complete the wrapping. In this way, Chun is able to integrate traditional materials into a contemporary context.

A look inside award-winning artist Kwang-Young Chun's studio as he discusses his methodology and the significance of Korean Mulberry paper in his works. 

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