To follow pick lists you need to be logged in.
OK
menu

Menu

Switch city:

Venice

Select City

Back

Breath of the month

Keem Jiyoung, Glowing Hour, 2024, oil on canvas, 80.3 x 65.1 cm

Artists

Keem Jiyoung

Press release

Since the Sewol ferry tragedy in 2014, Keem has been delving into socio-political defects of the current world that contemporary disasters bring to light. As an attempt to perceive the contemporary era in a historical sense, Keem’s work focuses on social incidents and evokes a sense of connection between individuals and society.

The title of the exhibition Breath of the Month alludes to the calendar year with all its recorded dates that we mustn’t forget. In this way, they allow us to contemplate the interconnectedness of both death and birth, loss and gain. Moreover, the title alludes to the breath we have left every month to think deeply in silence and to meditate.

Central to the exhibition are 18 recent paintings of the Glowing Hour series. Each canvas depicts a captivating meditation on the fragility and warmth of life, symbolized by the flickering flame of a candle. They offer a vivid commentary on the universal human experience, bridging the intimate narratives of individual lives with the collective resilience demanded by man-made disasters. In the second space, 10 candle sculptures are found, carefully placed on a plinth. The works are titled Look at This Unbearable Darkness and evoke the solemnity of memorials. They resemble hands clasped in prayer at various stages of melting and they symbolize a collective plea for understanding, and empathy in the aftermath of a disaster. Conversely, these works offer a counterpoint of Keem’s exploration of light. As candles, extinguished midway through burning, within the artist’s practice, they become a study of darkness, a contemplation on illumination and obscurity. This examination of light and shadow underpins the artists approach throughout, evident in the blurred oscillation between figuration and abstraction, as well as the delicately layered transition between hues of pinks, yellows, oranges, and reds in the paintings.

This multi-disciplinary presentation serves as a potent social critique, providing a perspective and framework for comprehending the cyclical nature of man-made disasters and their lasting repercussions on humanity. Its relevance extends to conflicts and disasters globally, both contemporary and historical. These works compel viewers to act, urging accountability for those responsible for such senseless loss of life. Additionally, prompting a reconsideration of how we memorialize and honor the victims of such tragedies.

Through
18 January 2025
Venue
Galerie Philippzollinger
Address
Rämistrasse 5
8001 Zurich
Hours
Tue-Fri: 11:00-18:00, Sat: 11:00-17:00, Sun-Mon: closed