Park Dae Cho makes affecting works that reference the cool world of media and the greater circumstances, not without grief, of contemporary experience. He works by painting over photographs of children, joining two mediums to portray his subjects in a kind of purgatory. Park’s treatment of serious questions of esthetic import suggests that he is committed to a wide-ranging, philosophical vision of real life. In many ways, like the midcareer artists of his generation, he straddles the difficulties facing not only Korean society but the global situation at large. His work presupposes an awareness of modernism and its postmodern developments, and the elegance of his surfaces make it clear that he is very aware of the lure of the gilded image, the photograph’s ability to stop time?even if only for a moment. The resulting images captivate in the instant they are viewed, but they also deserve greater meditation, in keeping with the serious implications of their content. This is work of its time, but there is also the suggestion that there is a future for them as documents of a challenged and challenging international Korea.
One of the ethical touchstones of our historical memory regards our feelings about the atomic bomb, which created a great divide in our moral reasoning before and after the event. Boom Boom, a photograph of an Asian child’s eyes?the lower half of her face is covered by a black scarf?would be a compelling image of innocence if not for the atomic mushroom clouds found dead center in each of her pupils. How do we understand the extraordinary weight of an image of a young child who carries death in her gaze? This is not a jaded image, but it does suggest a provocation: we know that through the history of literature, there is often a connection between beauty and death, but it is rare to find so obvious an identification between the two, as happens here. Perhaps the truth is that we can no longer afford to be roundabout in our presentation of atomic destruction, which threatens us still. The eyes of the young girl, as beautiful as she may be, show us a different version of reality, filled with the implications of suffering. As a result, there is a gravitas that subverts the gleaming attractiveness of the face, making the artwork a study in the brutal implications of whole-scale destruction.
A City-Bred Child, in many ways similar to Boom Boom, consists of a mixed-media, transparency image, again of a girl’s eyes and hair; she too has her lower face covered by an article of clothing. But the upper face this time is composed of bright-green squares?a reenvisioning of the simpler, but just as effective, image we face in Boom Boom. This small series is not without its visual expressiveness, although it is clear that its content possesses danger. Another piece, Broken Heart, shows an image of a little girl in an acrylic painting that follows an engraving. Done in deepening greens that darken almost to black, Broken Heart is an affecting work of art, whose formal arrangement is organized by a series of lines describing rectangles and squares over the surface of the image. At once a tour de force as a technical exercise and an emotionally compelling image, Broken Heart shows us that the dignity?the spiritual worth?of children remains a strong interest of the artist, taking first place in his artistic focus. As a group the images show us that behind the surface suavity of the pictures there lies a deeper purpose and more serious intention than viewers might initially pick up. This gravity of purpose links Park to Buddhism, its high regard for all forms of life.
As Park points out, his images concern the suffering that occurs in the world. The artist who made the paintings I describe contains them within the confines of his working imagination. Yet the reminder of public disaster remains. The haunting gaze of the young Korean girl acts as a striking reminder of experience, mostly in the moral sense. While it is painful to see a girl’s eyes communicate a holocaust as part of their claim on the viewer, it is nonetheless a demand that we face the actuality of historical experience. No matter the absurdity of finding the mushroom clouds in the eyes of a child, whose countenance after all is a reflection of our own; what matters is that the image is not processed superficially, but rather as a notion of what we are capable of doing, as horrible as it may be. The realism we come across in Park’s art fills it with a tangible presence, which intimates not only the innocence of children but also the infinitely barbaric violence of the atomic bomb. As a result, Park comes down pretty much on the side of experience, using his imagination to draw attention to facts we would rather not face.
This preference for a close-to-brutal realism shows us that there are still artists who are willing to commit themselves to describing destructive impulses, even as they contrast malevolent events with the haunting blamelessness of youth. The choice is clear: either we can try to raise our children as the innocents they are, or we can subject them to death and destruction. Art should report on the human condition as objectively as it can?not because it is bound to do so but because it offers us a mirror of infinite variation. Thus, the great range of subjects we treat in art cannot only concern innocence; it must address the violence that is part of life. Aware of ethical culpability, Park presents to us small spectacles of narration that throw light on problems we are all beset with. The conflation of beauty with the bomb is a moral subversion, but one that reflects our own culpability internationally. However honest we may be with ourselves, however moved we may be by what is beautiful, we have to come to grips with our capacity for creating violence. By claiming beauty as an ally, Park sweetens the pill that we all must take. It is not his fault that we remain what we are.
Jonathan Goodman
Jonathan Goodman is a poet and writer based in New York City. His specialty is in writing about contemporary Asian art, for such publications as Sculpture, artcritical.com, and Yishu, a Vancouver-based journal on contemporary Chinese art. He currently teaches contemporary art criticism at Pratt Institute, an art school located in Brooklyn.
Jonathan Goodman
This preference for a close-to-brutal realism shows us that there are still artists who are willing to commit themselves to describing destructive impulses, even as they contrast malevolent events with the haunting blamelessness of youth. The choice is clear: either we can try to raise our children as the innocents they are, or we can subject them to death and destruction. Art should report on the human condition as objectively as it can?not because it is bound to do so but because it offers us a mirror of infinite variation. Thus, the great range of subjects we treat in art cannot only concern innocence; it must address the violence that is part of life. Aware of ethical culpability, Park presents to us small spectacles of narration that throw light on problems we are all beset with. The conflation of beauty with the bomb is a moral subversion, but one that reflects our own culpability internationally. However honest we may be with ourselves, however moved we may be by what is beautiful, we have to come to grips with our capacity for creating violence. By claiming beauty as an ally, Park sweetens the pill that we all must take. It is not his fault that we remain what we are.
Jonathan Goodman
Jonathan Goodman is a poet and writer based in New York City. His specialty is in writing about contemporary Asian art, for such publications as Sculpture, artcritical.com, and Yishu, a Vancouver-based journal on contemporary Chinese art. He currently teaches contemporary art criticism at Pratt Institute, an art school located in Brooklyn.
Jonathan Goodman
Park, dae cho
M.F.A in Korean Painting major, Graduate school of Art & design Sang-myung University Citation
Present Ph.D. Art & Design Department, Sang-myung University
M.F.A in Korean Painting major, Graduate school of Art & design Sang-myung University Citation
Present Ph.D. Art & Design Department, Sang-myung University
Selected One Person Exhibitions
2011, Mar An exhibition for Ph.D. of fine art thesis at Gallery Jung
2010, Nov "Purity"( Gallery M)
Oct " Desire" (Gallery Jinsun)
June. ‘Innocence Lost’( Chelsea Art Museum )
Mar. SOAF( solo booth, coex )
2011, Mar An exhibition for Ph.D. of fine art thesis at Gallery Jung
2010, Nov "Purity"( Gallery M)
Oct " Desire" (Gallery Jinsun)
June. ‘Innocence Lost’( Chelsea Art Museum )
Mar. SOAF( solo booth, coex )
Selected Collections
Singapore National Art Museum
Hoseo University
National Museum of Contemporary Art, Korea
Gyeong-gi Provincial Art Museum
Hanwon Art Museum /City hall of Yongin
The City Hall of Won-ju /
Boseung Green tea Museun / Sang-myung University Museum,
Gallery Won / Gallery Jin sun / Gyeng-hyang Gallery
Gallery Dos / Gallery Jung / Stanza Gallery
A number of corporations and individuals
Singapore National Art Museum
Hoseo University
National Museum of Contemporary Art, Korea
Gyeong-gi Provincial Art Museum
Hanwon Art Museum /City hall of Yongin
The City Hall of Won-ju /
Boseung Green tea Museun / Sang-myung University Museum,
Gallery Won / Gallery Jin sun / Gyeng-hyang Gallery
Gallery Dos / Gallery Jung / Stanza Gallery
A number of corporations and individuals
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