RETURN TRIP

ROHWAJEONG
(Yunhee Roh & Hyunseok Jeong)


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Opening on Saturday, January 18th from 6pm to 9 pm
18.01 – 22.02.2014.

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Rohwajeong is an artist duo composed by Yunhee Roh (wife) and Hyunseok Jeong (husband), both native of Seoul in 1981. They create the duo Rohwajeong in 2007, and began to work about human relationships. They currently work about those human relationships that change through space and time or about stories of their environnement using many media.
RohwaJeong draws an analogy between their latest exhibition and their thoughts on the term ‘journey’, where journey stands for physical movement along a distance that stands as absolute. Even a journey with a conspicuous purpose or specific aim can bring about unexpected inner changes. After travelling with the right dose of strain, curiosity and fear, things back at the familiar territory seem unchanged. What has been changed is the subject of thoughts that perceives the surroundings, which in turn changes the object of perception.
RohwaJeong intend to understand the experience of exhibition as a journey, from the genesis of key ideas for the birth of a work of art in the offing, and that of spectators whose journey begins as they entre the exhibition space and encounter various works of art until they pass below the exit sign. The duo for whom ‘relationship’ and ‘in-between’ once marked the important beginning of their career, now attempts to expand on their initial ideas toward the artists’ (daily) life and their relationship with their own work, as well as their thoughts on the term ‘we’ and the intimacy vis-à-vis things surrounding our existence. At the Galerie DohyangLee, the multifariousness of the duo’s work is staged with different media, all of which boil down to one conclusive point.
For the basement level was used candles instead of halogen lights, which allows to conserve the original atmosphere of the basement, but also for a sense of conservation of the works themselves, like old relics having never been displaced. Meanwhile, two projections, one installed in the basement Black Mountain and the other on ground floor Milk, create a black-white contrast constituting their overall visual impression. In effect it portrays “society” as impregnated with countless changes. And in fact the society follows certain structures of repetition or patterns that always remain difficult to be broken down, which is the common denominator in both projections.
In Black Mountain, the mountain is shaped by blackened newspapers familiar to the generation preceding that of the artists. The shape of the material evolves through various external factors to give new shapes such as one of mountain range or hummock and does not crumble even despite the raging blizzard. On the other hand, Milk shows non-focal yet obscurely focused white images filling the entire screen. There, milk, usually recognised as an agent that dissolves into coffee and other foodstuffs to smooth out the taste, suddenly gives off bubbles with a violent sound. The work offers a microscopic view of the existence of violence that persists but remains hard to recognise. The previously unseen facet of newspaper and milk come face to face on a breakfast table that usually serves to place the two objects.
All of the above is accompanied by two plant pots and a can inviting the spectators to kick around throughout the exhibition space. Along with Time is Disgusting, another work Moving traces the movements of the kicked-about can on the gallery floor plan. Standing between Tree of Boundaries and Cloud of Boundaries is Bye-Bye where the two former works are facing each other, all of which draw a ‘dialogue’, specific to the œuvre of RohwaJeong, and hovers between the natural and the artificial, quotidian life and artistic operation, the real and the image, goodwill and ill will of Time, departure and return.
These are results to be considered unconsciously deriving from the duo’s co-operation as one, but also the dual-identity relationship that gives birth to another entirely new identity, which is also specific to RohwaJeong.
Finally, in The Thing(The thing that you know, I do not want to know*.), the couple pulls on a rope figuring a sentence on a canvas, which they pick up to get it up in the air. It distills the duo’s modus operandi as a long journey. It also gives rise to an imagery that embodies first the artists’ squabbling and technical arguments in the process of creation and finding the right balance, and a collective bodily act of leaving afloat the trace of their changed self(-ves) through the journey.

* text on the rope.

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Twins, 2014, plants, artificial plants, variable dimensions, unique pieces, photo © Aurélien Mole

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The Thing (The thing that you know, I do not want to know), 2014, canvas, rope, variable dimensions, unique piece, photo © Aurélien Mole

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Souvenir of Somewhere(frame), 2013 – 2014, acrylic on second hand magazines, variable dimensions, unique pieces, photo © Aurélien Mole

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Milk, 2014, video, color, 7’49’’, edition of 3 + 2AP
Souvenir of Somewhere(frame), 2013 – 2014, acrylic on second hand magazines, variable dimensions, unique pieces, photo © Aurélien Mole

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Milk, 2014, video, color, 7’49’’, edition of 3 + 2AP
Souvenir of Somewhere(frame), 2013 – 2014, acrylic on second hand magazines, variable dimensions, unique pieces, photo © Aurélien Mole

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Moving – Missing link, 2014, screen projector, A4, 21 x 30 x 80 cm, variable dimensions, unique pieces, photo © Aurélien Mole

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Moving – Missing link, 2014, screen projector, A4, 21 x 30 x 80 cm, variable dimensions, unique pieces, photo © Aurélien Mole

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Time is disgusting, 2014, digital printing, can, variable dimensions, limited edition, photo © Aurélien Mole

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Tree of Boundaries, 2013, newspaper, 42 x 29 cm, unique piece, photo © Aurélien Mole

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Bye Bye, 2014, wooden cutting board, 33 x 21 cm, unique piece, photo © Aurélien Mole

 

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Cloud of Boundaries, 2013, acrylic on second hand magazines, 38,5 x 28,5 cm, unique piece
Bye Bye, 2014, wooden cutting board, 33 x 21 cm, unique piece, photo © Aurélien Mole

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Black Mountain, 2014, video, color, 2’13’’, edition of 3 + 2AP, photo © Aurélien Mole

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Twins, 2014, plants, artificial plants, variable dimensions, unique pieces
The Thing (The thing that you know, I do not want to know), 2014,
canvas, rope, variable dimensions, unique piece, photo © Aurélien Mole