Yun Hyong-keun
This online presentation of works by Yun Hyong-keun opened in parallel with the artist’s recent exhibition on view from January 17–March 7, 2020 at the gallery’s 537 West 20th Street location in New York.
One of the most significant Korean artists of the twentieth century, Yun is widely recognized for his signature abstract compositions, which engage with yet transcend Eastern and Western art movements and visual traditions.
Focusing on the artist’s work from the late 1980s and 1990s, the exhibition features distinctive abstract paintings from this late period of Yun’s career. Included here are a number of works on paper from the artist's solo exhibition, along with a selection of small paintings that have been made available exclusively online.
Image: Yun Hyong-keun, Burnt Umber & Ultramarine, 1991 (detail)
Read the full review by Will Heinrich in The New York Times
Image © Laziz Hamani. Courtesy of the Estate of Yun Hyong-keun.
Image © Laziz Hamani. Courtesy of the Estate of Yun Hyong-keun.
Image © Laziz Hamani. Courtesy of the Estate of Yun Hyong-keun.
“I paint a single wail, with no small talk.”
—Yun Hyong-keun, diary entry from 1977
Yun’s mature works of the 1990s, of which several examples are presented for the first time in his current exhibition, show the refinement of his interests and technique to an acute, monumental level.
In these later works, Yun’s abstract forms become larger and darker, lines in some of his paintings become tighter and straighter, and the edges of his forms appear less diffuse and more defined.
Courtesy of the Estate of Yun Hyong-keun. ©Laziz Hamani
“He attempted to draw the highest degree of expressiveness from very simple elements that remained unchanged over the decades: raw canvas, dark and very diluted pigments, repeated gestures and dreams.”
—Daniela Ferretti, in Yun Hyong-keun (2019)
The artist’s approach to monochromatic abstraction centered on the use of an extremely limited palette of dark pigments that he allowed to bleed naturally over unprimed canvas.
He also experimented with the absorbent qualities of Hanji, a Korean paper made from the bark of the mulberry tree.
“Nature, however you look at it, is always unadorned, fresh, and beautiful. I wonder if my paintings could capture the beauty of nature. No, it would be impossible. Even so, I want to make paintings that, like nature, one never tires of looking at. That is all that I want in my art.”
—Yun Hyong-keun, “A Thought in the Studio,” in Yun Hyong-keun (2015)
“What Yun got from Rothko, and how he made it his own, is as complicated and nuanced as it was for Robert Ryman. In fact, a show of Rothko, Ryman, and Yun could be illuminating,”
Read the full review by John Yau in Hyperallergic.
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