Yongsun Jang
Dark Matter 1104Scorched stainless steel Height – 100cms Width – 76cms Depth – 32cms | Dark matter 1104 | Dark matter 1104Detail | Particle 431022 VScorched stainless steel Height – 63cms Width – 63cms Depth – 22cms |
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Particle 431022 VDetail | Particle 431022 V | Particle 431022 VIIScorched stainless steel Height – 33cms Width – 33cms Depth – 24cms | Particle 431022 VIIDetail |
Particle 431022 VIIDetail |
Yongsun Jang is an artist living and working in Seoul, Korea with a BFA and MFA in Fine Art – Sculpture from the University of Seoul. His multifaceted approach to sculpture and sculptural installations is both innovative and engaging asking questions of the viewer of both what they see and what they sense when encountering his work. Yongsun's work is highly crafted yet beautifully organic, referencing cells, organic matter, marine life and interstellar phenomena such as black holes and dark matter.
One is struck by the dichotomy between the physical presence and suggested ephemeral nature of the sculpture. Yet, Yongsun Jang as a sculptor has an intuitive feel for his medium that translates to a mastering of the delicate balance between solid and that which is in flux. Thus he is able to create forms that echo that which we can sense but cannot touch.
"I try to visualise the persistent quest toward the substance of life into my art... The stainless steel pipes cut with
certain/varied lengths are connected together, dynamically portraying the beginning and the moments of birth, and becomes a nest or bowels that hold lights and life. The substance of life, the light, life and birth, all these are the subjects that he wants to portray through his works, and they all pose these questions: where we come from, and how
the absolute all really began?
My works are comprised of small and thin pipes with the dimeters of 7-34 mm, and sometimes, the cut dissections seem like they are small molecules of organic beings. This is why I named one of my series of works as <Particle>. These particles (or cut dissections) of pipes are heated up using LPG-oxygen torch, so they have aurora-like colors which are the most unique colors that can be given to stainless metals. Those individual ‘particles’ are arranged in a dynamic way, as if an organic being is moving in its own will.
My works are most intense when seen in a sunset or when placed in/under carefully calibrated lightings which enable the works to breathe. As if these small particles come together to produce strong explosive energy, you are soon entering into an imagination that the cold metals are indeed some organic beings with warm blood, breathing with life." - Excerpts from the artists text 'Light, Life and the Origin'
Yongsun Jang has exhibited extensively across Korea along with participation in group shows in the USA, Germany and Israel. He has work in the public collections of the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Korea, the Osan Museum of Art, Korea and Samsung C&T among others.