Yonghyeon Lee
Dancing Person, 2023
I make one leg using clay and then make another leg that goes down to a certain extent. The body is divided into two, and a hole appears in the stomach. As I shaped them with my hands, the form became like a wave, as if it were undulating. When I made several people and put them in one place, they looked like they were dancing. They were all dancing in different ways.
– Artist’s note from “Dancing People”
As someone stares intently into another’s eyes, I felt an emotion of longing for something that cannot be seen, even though I was looking at an object. To give shape to this emotion that cannot be conveyed through the word “vague,” I reveal the object through coincidental and intuitive acts. The work appears in mixed colors after being formed without defining a specific shape. The colors that are accidentally discovered in the kiln gave me new inspiration. When two glazes overlap and are painted, unlike with watercolors, a new pattern of colors appears through chemical reactions in the high-temperature kiln. The stimulation of the senses that suddenly appeared as unexpected colors, which could not be intended or planned, felt like encountering a familiar yet unfamiliar person by chance. My work naturally led to an interest in colors.
The ambiguous colors of ceramics that cannot be defined by a single color, along with the irregular shapes of elusive curves, were connected to large resin sculpture paintings. Using primary paints, I created dozens of colors and applied them to the object in hazy shades that could reveal the emotions that I had at the time of the work. The work, which emits a mysterious light like ceramics, blurs the boundary between intention and unintentional. Perhaps, I am constantly searching for unseen shapes through coincidence and intuition to express something that exists but does not disappear.
I make one leg using clay and then make another leg that goes down to a certain extent. The body is divided into two, and a hole appears in the stomach. As I shaped them with my hands, the form became like a wave, as if it were undulating. When I made several people and put them in one place, they looked like they were dancing. They were all dancing in different ways.
– Artist’s note from “Dancing People”
Dancing Person, 2023
Traces of Sense, 2022
Sensory Head, 2022
Two Fronts, 2023
Dancing Person, 2023
Dancing Person, 2023
Blue Face, 2023
Dancing Person, 2023
Korean, b. 1970
Korean, b. 1997
Korean
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