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과거중요전시행사

[양혜규] 불확실성의 '가능성', 마이애미 배스미술관 전

21세기의 키워드 중 하나인 불확실성의 정점, 불확실성=불예측성=가변성=융통성=유동성=변형성=디지털노마드(이동성)=탈규칙성=비선형성=비전형성=랜덤액세스(random access)=우연성=유연성=불가해성 전시회의 제목 인 불확실성 콘 (Cone of Uncertainty)에서는 크게 불안정하고 항상 변하지 만 시간이 지남에 따라 점차적으로 궤도를 드러내는 미래를 암시한다.  양혜규 홈 http://www.heikejung.de/

국립현대미술관(MMCA, 관장 윤범모)은 《MMCA 현대차 시리즈 2020》의 작가 양혜규 선정을 발표했다. 전 지구적이면서 동시에 일상적이고 토속적인 재료로 구성한 복합적인 조각과 대형 설치 작품으로 잘 알려진 작가는 서사와 추상의 관계성, 여성성, 이주와 경계 등의 주제 의식을 다뤄왔다. 양혜규의 주제는 살린다의 명사인 '살림(아무렇지 않게 버려진 모두가 외면하는 꺼져가는 생명을 다시 살려내는 부활)'이다 <링크> https://seulsong.tistory.com/849

In the Cone of Uncertainty November 2, 2019 - April 5, 2020 The Bass Museum of Art, Miami Beach, USA Installation view of Haegue Yang: In the Cone of Uncertainty, The Bass Museum of Art, Miami Beach, USA, 2019 

Haegue Yang’s exhibition “In the Cone of Uncertainty” at The Bass Museum of Art in Miami Beach presents a selection of Yang’s oeuvre spanning the last decade. The show features window blind installations, anthropomorphic sculptures, light sculptures, and mural-like graphic wallpaper – taking its title from an expression of the South Florida vernacular, that describes the predicted path of hurricanes

양혜규 마이애미 전시 참석

Haegue Yang lives and works in Berlin, Germany and Seoul, South Korea. She is a Professor at the Städelschule in Frankfurt am Main. Recipient of the 2018 Wolfgang Hahn Prize, she held a survey exhibition titled ETA at the Museum Ludwig in Cologne in the same year, which displayed over 120 works of Yang from 1994-2018. Forthcoming projects include the Museum of Modern Art (October 2019), Tate St. Ives (May 2020) and Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto (2020). Haegue Yang: In the Cone of Uncertainty at The Bass in Miami Beach runs until April 5, 2020. Haegue Yang: In the Cone of Uncertainty at The Bass Museum of Art in Miami Beach, December 6, 2019.

[Press release] (Miami Beach, USA, May 23, 2019). The Bass presents In the Cone of Uncertainty, a major solo exhibition by Haegue Yang (b. 1971, Seoul) opening on Saturday, November 2, 2019. Bringing together new and existing works spanning the last decade, the exhibition foregrounds the artist’s consistent curiosity about the world and tireless experimentation with materializing the complexity of identity politics.

In the Cone of Uncertainty presents a selection of Yang’s oeuvre ranging from blind installations, anthropomorphic sculptures, light sculptures, and mural-like graphic wallpaper pieces, to thematic groupings of works related to certain topics, such as domesticity. In addition to sculptural works, her approach often mobilizes performative as well as sonic and olfactory elements.

Yang’s works are known not only for their diversity of media and methods, but also for their eloquent and seductive sculptural language of visual abstraction, often derived from her research concerning historical figures and events, and traditional craft techniques. Her multisensory environments to go on view at The Bass, prompt uncontrollable and fleeting connotations of time, place, figures and experiences that connect us – transcending the individual field of perception. Some of her anthropomorphic sculptures play with the notion of ‘folk’ as a vernacular idea, while also eclipsing it as a tradition of specific cultures.

The exhibition’s title, In the Cone of Uncertainty, alludes to a future that is largely unstable and always changing, but perhaps gradually revealing its trajectory over time. Referencing statistical models that are used to predict extreme weather trajectories, such as cyclones and hurricanes – ubiquitous to South Florida – the concept communicates current anxieties related to climate change, overpopulation, resource scarcity and nation-states, while highlighting thematic tensions in Yang’s work by addressing notions of movement, displacement and domesticity. Further, the performative and immersive nature of Yang’s works generates profound feelings of alienation on both social and existential levels. Given its location in Miami Beach,

The Bass is a particularly resonant site to present Yang’s work, considering that over fifty percent1 of the population in Miami-Dade County is born outside of the United States, and it is a geographical and metaphorical gateway to Latin America.Yang has been commissioned by the museum to conceive a site-specific wallpaper in the staircase that connects the exhibition spaces across The Bass’ two floors. This wallpaper will be applied to both transparent and opaque surfaces to accompany the ascending and descending path of visitors within the exhibition.

Informed by research about Miami Beach’s climatically-precarious setting the wallpaper will play with meteorological infographics and diagrams as vehicles for abstraction. Interested in how severe weather creates unusual access to negotiations of belonging and community, as well as the human urge to predict catastrophic circumstances, the work reflects a geographic commonality that unconsciously binds people together through a shared determination to face a challenge and react in solidarity.

Yang’s exhibition encompasses galleries on both the first and second floors of the museum and exemplifies an array of Yang’s formally, conceptually ambitious and rigorous body of work. Considered an important ‘Light Sculpture’ work and one of the last made in the series, Strange Fruit (2012-13) occupies one of the first spaces in the exhibition. The group of anthropomorphic sculptures take their title from Jewish-American Abel Meeropol’s poem famously vocalized by Billie Holiday in 1939. Hanging string lights dangling from metal clothing racks intertwined with colorfully painted papier-mâché bowls and hands that hold plants resonate with the poem’s subject matter. The work reflects a recurring interest within Yang’s practice, illuminating unlikely, less-known connections throughout history and elucidating asymmetrical relationships among figures of the past. In the story of Strange Fruit, the point of interest is in a poem about the horrors and tragedy of lynching of African-Americans in the American South born from the empathies of a Jewish man and member of the Communist party. Yang’s interests are filtered through different geopolitical spheres with a keen concentration in collapsing time and place, unlike today’s compartmentalized diasporic studies.

Central to In the Cone of Uncertainty is the daring juxtaposition of two major large-scale installations made of venetian blinds. Yearning Melancholy Red and Red Broken Mountainous Labyrinth are similar in that they are both from 2008, a year of significant development for Yang, and their use of the color red: one consists of red blinds, while the other features white blinds colored by red light. With its labyrinthine structure, Red Broken Mountainous Labyrinth bears a story of the chance encounter between Korean revolutionary Kim San (1905-1938) and American journalist Nym Wales (1907-1997), without which a chapter of Korean history would not survive to this day.

Yearning Melancholy Red references the seemingly apolitical childhood of French writer and filmmaker Marguerite Duras (1914-1996). While living in French Indochina (present-day Cambodia, Vietnam, and Laos), Duras and her family experienced a type of double isolation in material and moral poverty, by neither belonging to the native communities nor to the French colonizers, embodying the potentiality for her later political engagement. Despite their divergent subject matter, both works continue to envelop an interest in viewing histories from different perspectives and the unexpected connections that arise. By staging the two works together, what remains is Yang’s compelling constellation of blinds, choreographed moving lights, paradoxical pairings of sensorial devices – fans and infrared heaters – and our physical presence in an intensely charged field of unspoken narratives.

A third space of the exhibition will feature work from Yang’s signature ‘Sonic Sculpture’ series titled, Boxing Ballet (2013-15). The work offers Yang’s translation of Oskar Schlemmmer’s Triadic Ballet (1922), transforming the historical lineage of time-based performance into spatial, sculptural and sensorial abstraction. Through elements of movement and sound, Yang develops an installation with a relationship to the Western Avant-Garde, investigating their understanding in the human body, movement and figuration. Observing hidden structures to reimagine a possible community, Yang addresses themes that recur in her works such as migration, diasporas and history writing.

Works presented in In the Cone of Uncertainty offer a substantial view into Yang’s rich artistic language, including her use of bodily experience as a means of evoking history and memory. Publication The exhibition will be accompanied by a catalogue published by Hatje Cantz, with texts by Silvia Karman Cubiñá, Leilani Lynch and Philippe Vergne, director of Serralves Museum of Contemporary Art, available starting December 2019.

Encounter between Korean revolutionary Kim San (1905-1938) and American journalist Nym Wales (1907-1997)

Red Broken Mountainous Labyrinth bears a story of the chance encounter between Korean revolutionary Kim San (1905-1938) and American journalist Nym Wales (1907-1997), without which a chapter of Korean history would not survive to this day.