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Moon Jar by Young Sook Park with Solo Presentation of XU Longsen is on view at Art Basel Miami Beach, Booth N7, HANART TZ Gallery through December 9th, 2018.
'A Significant Collection of Korean Ceramics to be Presented at The San Francisco Fall Art & Antiques Show'
San Francisco , California, September 2018
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Don Joint of The Orange Chicken Gallery (New York) is delighted to present important Korean ceramics at the upcoming San Francisco Fall Art & Antiques Show (October 11 through 14, 2018), the 37th edition of the oldest continuously operating international art and antiques show on the West Coast.
A regular exhibitor at the fair, New York-based dealer Don Joint has conceived this year’s presentation to be entirely of Korean ceramics: period, modern, as well as contemporary, reflecting his long time passion as a collector of this genre.
Anchoring the exhibit will be a large selection of works by leading contemporary practitioner Park Young Sook (b. 1947). Park is world renown for revitalising the ceramic art traditions of the Joseon Dynasty (ca. 1300 - 1900), the technical mastery and dedication of which are evident in her contemporary Moon Jars pieces. Park’s work is in the permanent collections of countless institutions, including Asian Art Museum of San Francisco (San Francisco, CA), Arthur M. Sackler Museum, Harvard University (Cambridge, MA), Philadelphia Museum of Art, (Philadelphia, PA), Seattle Art Museum (Seattle, WA), British Museum (London, UK), and Victoria and Albert Museum (London, UK). The gallery’s offerings at the fair include Park’s collaboration with the internationally-recognized Dansaekhwa and Mono-Ha master Lee Ufan -- porcelain plates and tea service that capture a heightened sense of contemporary Asian minimalism applied to functional art.
Offering a counterpoint to Park’s reserved aesthetic are monumental works by Lee Kang-hyo (b.1961) in a manner that combines Korean Onggi and Buncheong techniques. While adhering to the tradition of gray stoneware decorated with white slip, the spontaneity of Lee’s colors and contemplative forms capture a modern spirit. Lee’s work is held in numerous public and private collections including British Museum (London, UK), and Victoria and Albert Museum, (London, UK), Museum of Fine Arts (Boston, MA), and Art Institute of Chicago (Chicago, IL).
Three important period ceramic pieces from the 16th century through the 19th provide the historical reference points for the contemporary materials; on offer will be a large 16th century Moon Jar in white, a 16th century white porcelain bottle vase, and an early 19th century large buncheong vase inlaid with flowers and bees.
Booth No B8. at The San Francisco Fall Art & Antiques Show
October 11 through 14, 2018
Festival Pavilion, Fort Mason Center for Arts & Culture
Orange Chicken Gallery
344 West 23rd Street, 4D
NEW YORK, New York [email protected]
(570) 452-6437
http://www.theorangechicken.com
'The Dame Judi Dench’s ‘Favourite Things’'
Victoria & Albert Museum | Permeant Collections Catalouge
"THIS JAR IS JUST SO AESTHETICALLY BEAUTIFUL AND AN EXQUISITE ORNAMENT. I COULD LOOK AT IT ALL DAY...Read more
"THIS JAR IS JUST SO AESTHETICALLY BEAUTIFUL AND AN EXQUISITE ORNAMENT.
I COULD LOOK AT IT ALL DAY AND FEEL THAT THE TROUBLES OF THE WORLD WOULD DISAPPEAR.
IF I COULD CHOSSE JUST ONE PIECE TO HAVE IN MY HOUSE, THIS WOULD BE IT."
-DAME JUDI DENCH
'YOUNG SOOK PARK & UFAN LEE'
Mu[see]um / 2015
The Gallery Art Zone at the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (MMCA) in Seoul boasts a...Read more
YOUNG SOOK PARK & UFAN LEE
-by Julia Tarasyuk
The Gallery Art Zone at the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (MMCA) in Seoul boasts a vast and elegantly curated collection of delicate Korean ceramics designed by renowned and emerging local contemporary artists. The exquisite selection covers examples of traditional craftsmanship and minimalistic innovative designs. Among various unfamiliar names the eye of an art lover will immediately recognize one of the biggest artists in the Korean and international contemporary scene – Lee Ufan. Originally from Korea Lee Ufan became one of the central figures of Mono-ha (The School of Things), a new movement of Japanese art, sculpture and land art in particular, which emerged in the late 1960s. Throughout his work he continued to propose Mono-ha concepts in both artistic production and theoretical practice. Today Lee Ufan is one of the most internationally acclaimed artists in the contemporary art scene. Young Sook Park is one of the most respected Korean ceramics specialists. Her early artistic commitment to the traditions of Korean ceramics craftsmanship and desire to recreate the lost methods and styles of the Chosun Dynasty led her to the establishment of the Park Young Sook Ceramic Studio in 1979.
'ARTnews'
ARTnews, October 2011
When the avant- garde artist Lee Ufan met ceramicist Young Sook Park at her stu- dio in 1979...Read more
When the avant- garde artist Lee Ufan met ceramicist Young Sook Park at her stu- dio in 1979 in Seoul, he offered to mentor her, initiating a series of fruitful collabora- tions between the two Korean artists. This elegant show spotlighted a small selection of objects that the two pro- duced together, as well as several paint- ings by Lee Ufan and ceramics made by Young Sook Park.
Young Sook Park’s “Moon Jars” were particularly striking—their perfectly smooth white surfaces and sense of bal- ance demonstrate her discipline and pa- tience with the clay. This kind of ceramic art dates back to the Chosun Dynasty. The Moon Jar, traditionally celebrated for the harmony it achieves between mouth, body, and base, is difficult to per- fect, since the vessel’s upper section is much larger than its lower one, making it vulnerable to collapse during firing.
In their collaborative works, Lee Ufan’s marks adorn the surfaces of Young Sook Park’s porcelain, earthenware, and terra- cotta objects. A large plate from 1988, for example, features his brushwork as applied in oxidized iron and a fern-ash glaze. More than decoration, his gestural, rhythmic strokes respond to her process of forming the clay. He dissolves the dis- tinction between surface and object.
In Lee Ufan’s monochrome paintings shown here, the gestural brushstrokes repeat, yielding patterns that draw atten- tion to the tension between surface and ground. The vertical strokes of the oil on canvas With Wind (1990) are meant to echo gentle bursts of wind. The ethereal nature of such works was wonderfully offset by the highly tactile qualities of the ceramic pieces, seen in two slabs of unglazed terra-cotta (2005–7), made col- laboratively, whose smooth surfaces were interrupted with satisfying gouge marks. —Meredith Mendelsohn
'CEREAL'
Volume 15 | 2018
A moon jar is a serene and ethereal thing, like a rippling reflection of the moon itself in a lake....Read more
A moon jar is a serene and ethereal thing, like a rippling reflection of the moon itself in a lake. Young Sook Park is regarded as a modern master of this challenging form, and on meeting her, it soon becomes clear that creating a moon jar is far from a peaceful process. The jars are highly vulnerable to breakages in the kiln - only about 10 % survive firing. - while the luminous, plain white glaze is one of the most difficult to execute. It's a vocation that demands tremendous resilience and physical fitness. Now in her 70s, Park burns 500 calories a day at the gym, and farms her own vegetables. At her studio, huge bags of dried, home grown chillies sit alongside dozens of moon jars. She derives her energy from the work itself, and says she cannot fail to be happy and youthful when she spends her life transforming earth into 'jewels'.
Park's calling came in 2000, when she developed a passionate desire to conb·ibute to Korea's cultural identity. Embodying Neo-Confucian ideals of frugality and purity, the moon jar first emerged in Korea during an important period of renewal following the Japanese and Manchu invasions of the 16u, and 17th centuries. Reviving the b·adition seemed to be the perfect way to serve her country's cultural heritage. All she had to do was acquire the requisite technical skill. This task took five years of persistent trial and error. Now she pushes the boundaries of the forni, increasing the size of the jars, and refining the glazes and firing techniques. Her work can be found in the collections of the V&A, the British Museum of Art, the Seattle Art Museum, and the Arthur M. Sadder Museum at Harvard University. Viewed with hindsight, Park's whole life seems to lead towards the moon jar. Her father made intricate, traditional inlaid furniture, and her upbringing instilled her with an appreciation for fine craftsmanship. She became an antiques collector and, as a housewife and mother in the late 1970s, began making small ceramic pieces of her own. It was around this time that she bought a rare 18th century moon jar, mesmerised by its profound simplicity and a presence that she longed to replicate. She would eventually sell the jar to the Leeum, Samsung Museum of Art in Seoul, where it is now listed as a national treasure.
As we drink green tea, Park draws my attention to the immaculate white porcelain tea set in front ofus, another example of her work. The pot does not drip as she pours, and it stays hot long after we finish the last of the tea. She achieves these properties without calculations or measurements, yet lays no claim to this ability. It is her hands that do all this, she says. Years of working with her father, and handling countless pieces as a collector, have imparted generations of skill and knowledge in the form of an innate, tactile understanding. A rich seam of lineage and humility runs through her work, and she considers herself as much a medium as a creator. The crux of the moon jar is the 'belly', where the L,vo separately thrown halves, or bowls, join. She likens this connection to a marriage; both halves must be in harmony to survive. The jar's final shape depends on how this unique relationship endures firing, and is beyond her control.
Park's story would be incomplete without mentioning fellow Korean artist Lee Ufan. In the early 1980s, he came across her gallery, Young Sook Park Ceramic Studio. Recognising something exceptional in her work, he became an unexpected mentor and motivating force in her life. She expresses gratitude for his sometimes exacting, but always valuable, criticism, citing the moment he said he was proud of her as a true high point in her career. They have worked together on many occasions, holding their first major joint exhibition in Tokyo in 1987. Their most recent works, from 2016 to 2017, form the inaugural exhibition of Park's New York space, Y-S-P Gallery. Her porcelain surfaces provide a canvas for Lee's minimal, meditative brush strokes. Park and Lee also have nascent plans to establish a museum centred around their collaborative relationship. Park speaks passionately about this vision, and says she intends to continue working until it is realised.
For Park, the power of the moon jar is its ability to move people. It saddens her that many museums cannot devote enough space to display those in their collections as solitary, independent forms. The effect of the moon jar's austere beauty is not obvious or immediate; it works on the beholder slowly. Not intended to be symmetrical or perfectly shaped - just as the moon itself is not a perfect, unblemished sphere - the jars always reveal a human touch. This living quality expresses the full potential of porcelain; at once fragile and durable, fluid yet still.
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'The Seattle Times'
Friday October 4, 2011
A ghostly gateway stands in the middle of "Luminous," the big and beautiful Asian art exhibition...Read more
'PURE CLAY'
NEW YORK, at RH Gallery, November 2011
When the avant- garde artist Lee Ufan met ceramicist Young Sook Park at her studio...Read more