Jungju An

2016.3.10.—4.7.

DOOSAN Gallery New York

The 5th DOOSAN Yonkang Arts Awards

전시 이미지 The 5th DOOSAN Yonkang Arts Awards Recipient Jungju An's Solo Exhibition loop, Installation view, DOOSAN Gallery, Seoul, 2016
전시 이미지 Jungju An, Troll, 2012, 3 channel video and sound, color, 4min 35sec
전시 이미지 Jungju An, Chain Letter, 2015, 6 channel video and sound, color, 5min 55sec
전시 이미지 Jungju An, Concerto for Saw and Drum, 2015, 2 channel video and sound, color, 10min 5sec
전시 이미지 Jungju An, Their war 1 - Ethiopia, 2005, Single channel video and sound, color, 6min 17sec, Still cut
전시 이미지 Jungju An, Their war 2 - Israel, 2005, Single channel video and sound, color, 4min 40sec, Still cut
전시 이미지 Jungju An, Their war 3 - Pakistan, 2005, Single channel video and sound, color, 5min 59sec
전시 이미지 Jungju An, Marching, 2015, Modified to single channel from five, color, 11min 55sec
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DOOSAN Gallery New York is pleased to announce the Solo Exhibition of Jungju An, a recipient of the 5th annual DOOSAN Yonkang Arts Awards, from March 10th to April 7th, 2016. As Anʹs New York debut exhibition, it will comprise of his early through recent works, specifically eight multi-channel video works and one installation piece.

Jungju An segments his recorded sounds and images into their individual units, then he either expands or contracts them to reconnect them in a rhythmic manner, or emphasizes repetition to create musical, dynamic flow of images.

His early piece Drill (2005) involves the recording of Chinese soldiers performing close-order drills from various different angles. These footages are regenerated into repetitive, three screen multi-channel video work. Through segmented image and sound, the artist strives to raise up the relationship between the individual and the group in the standardization of our contemporary society. Turn Turn Turn-The Bottles (2007) edits the repetitive sounds of glass soju bottles clashing on a conveyor belt in a factory into the popular melody of the Beatlesʹ Ob-La-Di Ob-La-Da. Though the glass bottles on a conveyor belt represent mass production of capitalism, the artist is able to produce a new harmony through the machineʹs movement and sounds, using their aesthetic and formal elements.

Recent work Chain Letter (2015) is composed of footage recorded from the artistʹs travels culminating in a six channel video piece with 79 pages of text cards. Essentially, the receiver of the "Chain Letter" is told to send a letter to another person within the allocated, stated time. If the receiver complies, they will have good luck, and if not, it proclaims to cause bad luck. An uses this kind of letter structure and content within his work, creating the letter then placing the image-text cards with the video as a clue to help his audience decipher the meaning. In this way, the artist separates language with what it signifies, revealing the inconstancy of language. In addition, by separating image with sound, An further reveals his aesthetic point of view.

As the title of the exhibition loop suggests, An intends to use the aesthetic of repetition to emphasize the language-like aspect of images, and rather than communicating by description or narration, he intends to realize his goals through formal characteristics and methodologies within the works.



Jungju An (b. 1979) received his B.F.A. from Seoul National University and M.F.A. in Communication & Art from Yonsei University. He has had numerous Solo Exhibitions at BONGSAN Cultural Center (Daegu, KR, 2015), DOOSAN Art Center DOOSAN Gallery (Seoul, KR, 2015), Makeshop Art Space(Paju, KR, 2014), Project Space SARUBIA (Seoul, KR, 2012), and Künstlerhaus Bethanien (Berlin, DE, 2009). He also has had group exhibitions at National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (2015, Seoul, KR), Atelier Hermes (2015, Seoul, KR), National Museum of Contemporary Art (2013, Bucharest, RO), among many others.