KIM YongChul
Korea Tomorrow 2014
“The Reason I painted Peonies”
Hearts and Peonies are still images that appear in my paintings.
Living in Korea means living in a huge wave of social and cultural change. Urbanization, westernization, overflow of information, the internet and market development, distributive movement and human interchange, travels etc. have led to a massive change in the lives of the Korean people over the past half century. Due to the strong current of change everything shifted. Established values and cultural elements are dissolving and disappearing, that is reality. And yet, there are things that remain the same. Just like we can’t imagine a life without kimchi and under-floor heating, there must be things that never moved from our lives, things that are still alive.
There are values that derived from generation to generation, that were passed on to us from our parents. Filial piety as fundament for a sense and awareness of domestic affluence and happiness. These words may sound old-fashioned and conventional, but isn’t their meaning what we have been hoping for ? then and now ? and civilized societies have been trying to preserve?
Our ancestors valued harmony within the family. They attached prints of richly blooming Peomies (a symbol of wealth) and flowers and birds onto the built-in cupboard doors in the living room, they embroidered the bedding and drew on folding screens. Living in such an environment, seeing those images time and again, enabled them to calm their troubles, to pursue ‘togetherness’ and to lead a rich and peaceful life.
The world has changed and today we live in a time where our custom culture is slowly vanishing. The affluence and optimism, the love and the mentality that made us who we are today, lies within the ‘togetherness’ that is captured in those Peony paintings and prints of flowers and birds. They bloomed in my heart and I painted them richly in hopes of reaching my family, and furthermore, our society.
Yong-Chul Kim (Artist’s Note) 2014
KIM YongChul
Born in 1949, Seoul, Korea
EDUCATION
1971 M.F.A, Painting, Graduate School of Hong-Ik University, Seoul, Korea
1978 B.F.A, Painting, Hong-Ik University, Seoul, Korea
1998-99 Artist-In-Residence, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, USA
1999 1999 Visiting-Artist, University of Tennessee, Chattanooga, USA
SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITION
2013 Drawing Flowers, Yido Gallery, Seoul, Korea
2012 Solo Exhibition, Gallery Jhak, Seoul, Korea
2007 Solo Exhibition, Vit Gallery, Seoul, Korea
2002 Hyundai Art Center Gallery, Ulsan, Korea
1999 Cress Gallery, University of Tenn., Chattanooga, USA
1996 Solo Exhibition, Gallery Jo, Seoul, Korea
1994 Solo Exhibition, Gallery Boda, Seoul, Korea
1990 Solo Exhibition, Sam Gallery, Seoul, Korea
1984 Solo Exhibition, Korean Culture and Arts Foundation, Art Center, Seoul, Korea
1977 Solo Exhibition, Seoul Gallery, Seoul, Korea
SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITION
2010 The 30th Anniversary of the Young Korean Artists, National Museum
of Contemporary Art, Gwachun, Korea
2007 Peony After Peony, Dajeon Museum of Art, Dajeon, Korea
1999 Korean Pop, Sung-Kok Art Museum, Seoul, Korea
1998 Three Artists / Three Continents, Ewing Gallery of Art, University of
Tennessee, Knoxville, USA
1995 Tradition and Contemporary Works, Sonje Museum of Contemporary
Art, Kyungju, Korea
1991 The 1st Total Grand-Prix, Director’s Prize, Total Museum, Jangheung, Korea
1982 Aspects of Contemporary of Korean Art, Kyoto Art Museum, Kyoto, Japan
1981 Korean Drawing, Now, The Brooklyn Museum, New York, USA
Young Artists Exhibition, National Museum of Contemporary Art, Seoul, Korea
1980 Xlle Festival International de la Peinture, Chateau Musee,
Cagnes-Sur-Mer, France
TOMORROW 2014
Part 1 DESIGN TOMORROW : Sprout(Bal-a, 發芽)
Part 2 ART TOMORROW : Culture Print