TRUE
STORIES
Koh Sang
Woo Solo Show
6 May - 3 June 2010
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Virtual Tour | View Installation Images
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Koh
Sang Woo has a taste for controversy. His images may
look beautiful, but the stories beneath
needle away at the unspoken do’s and don’ts
that tie us up in social and cultural obligations. His
last exhibition in his hometown of Seoul, South Korea,
was almost pulled at the last moment due to a call from
KBS, the Korean equivalent of the BBC. It featured one
of their presenters, with her husband, in a state of
undress and, more importantly, without their permission.
Another show picturing a mixed race couple was simply
avoided and mothballed, to avoid offending ‘cultural
sensibilities’. And yet it’s hard for us
in the West to believe by just looking at the work.
Koh’s art is part painting,
part performance, documented in photography. Carefully
choosing his subjects
for their personal stories, he paints directly onto their
bodies as he works, and then reverses the colours in
the final exposure to give his photos an unmistakeable
electric vibrancy. In one way, he is an artist that paints
photographs, and sees the world in reverse. But this
reversal is also a social statement, a means of subverting
the way society can push people away from their ideals,
and make them compromise and change to accommodate social
pressures.
In True Stories, all his
photographs probe the kind of subtle conventions that
restrain and limit their subjects – be
it corporate control, racial prejudice, or the pressure
to “be the best” as in his Portrait of a
Girl / Portrait of a Woman” series. The works thus
become a kind of release and defiance, beautifully rendered.
And it’s his Eastern form of kicking against the
system that makes Koh’s work so interesting. Not
in the obvious punk aggressive way, what the West is
used do, but a more discreet and suave manner of counter-culture,
balancing Korean values of discipline and respect with
the need to make a point.
Koh is typical of why there
is a current swell of international interest in Korean
contemporary art. Moon Generation,
the spotlight exhibition for Korean Art at the Saatchi
Gallery in October 2009, received superb reviews, and
Koh been selected to exhibit at the Korean Art Show,
a similar show timed to coincide with the 2010 Armory
Show in New York. Having been overshadowed by the booming
Chinese market, increased investment and activity is
helping Korean art make serious inroads on the contemporary
scene. Given that Korea is currently the thirteenth largest
economy in the world (predicted to become the 3rd largest
by Goldman Sachs), and already has a massive cultural
presence in Asia through its films and music (known as
the Hallyu wave), it is only a matter of time before,
as an ArtTactic report recently stated, “the Korean
art market and its collectors .. play a very important
role in the Asian and international art market in the
future.”
True Stories in sponsored
by Kay Mounting, the diasec mounting specialist – www.kaymounting.co.uk

About Koh Sang Woo
Koh Sang Woo was born in
Seoul and currently lives in New York. He has had numerous
important international
exhibitions recently, including “Media Media” at
the Queens Museum New York, Pulse Miami, “Distinctively
Korea” at Christies in London, the Sungkok museum
in Seoul, and as an invited artist at the 798 Beijing
Biennial in China. Along with solid auction results in
both Hong Kong and New York, Koh also exhibited most
recently in the important “Korean Art Show” in
New York, timed to coincide with the Armory Show in 2010
and to raise the profile of contemporary Korean art.
True Stories will be his first solo exhibition in the
UK.
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Portrait of a Woman
C-Type Lambda Print, Diasec Mounted, ed. 5, 2010
107cm x 76cm

The Kiss II
C-Type Lambda Print, Diasec Mounted, ed. 5, 2010
107cm x 76cm

What Light Dreams
II
C-Type Lambda Print, Diasec Mounted, ed. 5, 2009
112cm x 163cm

There Was Love
III
C-Type Lambda Print, Diasec Mounted, ed. 5, 2009
78cm x 78cm
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