Lee Kyoung Mi
New Vertical PaintingOil on canvas & constructed birch panel frame, 157x122cm | New Vertical PaintingOil on canvas & constructed birch panel frame, 157x122cm |
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Education
2006 Master of Painting, Hongik University
2004 Bachelor of Arts, Hongik University
2000 Hongik University Bachelor of Arts in Engraving
Solo
2022 Can You Hear Me? Nana Astro, Studio Kihyun, Paju
2019 Lee Kyungmi Individual Exhibition, 3 rows of galleries, Seoul
2009 Kai's Gallery, Hong Kong
2008 Inana & Kim Ryuken, Pyo South, Seoul
2007 Room for Nana, C Cafe, Seoul
2006 Individual Exhibition, Noam Gallery, Seoul
2005 Nana Inside, Center for International Design Exchange, Seoul
Group
2020 iKONIC: A yearning for perfection, Art Delight, Seoul
2017 Time difference Parallax, Gallery Planet, Seoul
Award
2019 Seokju Art Award Winner
Lee Kyoung Mi's 'New Vertical Painting' is a work that brought the motif from 'Apocalypse' by German artist Albrecht Dürer. The Apocalypse is also called the Revelation of John and is the last volume of the New Testament, which talks about the end of the world and a new start afterwards. The author first encountered Dürer's 'Apocalypse' at Hessen State Museum in Germany in 2016, and it is said tha the line of living and breathing in his work caused a great stir in Lee's abyss in life in an era of lethargy and fragmentation. Lee created her inspiration as a work and introduced her first 'New Vertical Painting' in 2019, which drew a big attention and she won Seokju Art Award that year.
As an expression of awe toward Dürer, Lee translated all her works into brush strokes and brought the original work to the present. Although she could have chosen the 'new way' which is easily printed with a developed technology nowadays, she worked with the 'old way' which every stroke is made by hand. This is because Lee thought that the more times changes and technology develops, the more meaning of contrasting with what can be easily taken is amplified. New Vertical Painting, which was introduced in 2019, Durer's work was painted on a transcribed screen with printed advertising flyers in Germany like a collage of images.