Chung Shin: The Blooming Rolling Line

2 Oct - 20 Oct 2024

Space 97


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Chung Shin, who explores perception and language by drawing charcoal lines, spent a lot of time with calligraphy tools always spread out in the house when she was young. The playful experience of the four friends of the study (paper, brush, ink, and ink stone) - which was closer to drawing than writing - expanded to the material charcoal with the familiarity of 'black' that started along with ink, and she draws the shape of flowers and still life from lines that resemble letters as if writing. The lines take shape and reveal themselves as flowers, and the still life with intervened yellow rolls and rolls. Just like writing that begins with words and continues with sentences, it starts with lines and completes into a shape.




Seeking lines that comfort the heart, the artist says that imagining the coziness of being indoors, moderate splendor, and fruits rolling in the sun arouses the sensation of good feelings. Having done work based on drawings, the artist focuses on revealing through lines the immediacy of drawing as well as the visibility of various concepts that are occasionally revealed raw. Through a warm gaze, ubiquitous but not visible to everyone, the artist attempts to convey a bright and cheerful energy to modern people living busy everyday lives.



Hours : Tue-Sat, 10am-6pm

87, Dokseodang-ro, Yongsan-gu, Seoul, Korea

Email : pbg@printbakery.com
Tel : +82 1599 3403

Fax : +82 2 391 2017

Hours : Tue - Sat, 10am-6pm
87, Dokseodang-ro, Yongsan-gu, 
Seoul,  Korea 

Email : pbg@printbakery.com
Tel : +82 2 975 5888
Fax : +82 2 391 2017

Rondi Park examines the extremely personal traces surrounding desires and expands the category to popular sympathy and social phenomena. The artist who collects fragments of desire seething in a capitalist society and develops them into various media - such as painting, textiles, performance, and ceramics - develops her own narrative using the constantly reproduced desires as a medium.