Whitestone Gallery is proud to present FACE, an exhibition of scratches and oil on aluminum artworks by the Korean artist Han Youngwook at the gallery’s Hong Kong space, H Queen’s. On view will be a series of imaginative faces revealed in their most vivid form. The exhibition marks the artist’s first solo exhibition in Hong Kong and with the gallery.

Known for his poignant and detailed depictions of human figures that are full of flaws and emotions, Han’s choices of subject reflect his personal values and beliefs. For Han, young children represent innocence and a free soul, whereas young women captured at the brightest time of their lives imply ephemerality, and old women allude to the acceptance of reality and the embrace of life. Han’s practice is extremely intuitive as he often seeks inspiration in real life or on the web. Once he has decided and collected a person’s image, he tends to explore the person’s qualities, and combine his own perception and creativity to convey the person’s emotions in his paintings. Sometimes, the same face reappears in a slightly different expression, size, or color as the result of the artist’s attempts to understand the nature of humans and interpret and reinterpret the different layers of it.

Han’s works are monumental in size as well as materiality and methods. 13 years ago, the artist started using needles on an aluminum foil, but soon found the limitations of foil and replaced it with aluminum plate. Through a repetitive process of scratching, and coloring and decoloring by rubbing or pressing oil on the surface, the human figures are elaborated and their true character is revealed. Han’s works are not complete without lighting, in fact, lighting is intrinsic to Han’s works. Different lighting enables different dimensions, depending on the lighting and the angle of the viewer, different energies will come to light. In the end, Han’s work is all about synthesizing human energy with materiality.

Named FACE, the exhibition was originally titled “Übermensch” as a personal ode to Nietzsche’s life and philosophy. Though feeling inadequate to live up to Nietzsche’s influence, Han eventually changed the exhibition title to FACE, his works are still embedded with Nietzsche’s idea of the “Übermensch”. Meaning self-overcoming, “Übermensch” is an attitude towards life that helps one justify the existence of the human race and use will-to-power to influence and dominate life. The concept is also an approach to deal with the ‘truth’ in an individual and sensitive manner, rather than rationalism. Similarly, Han’s works focus on expressing human’s aura, rather than portraying an object in an extremely realistic way. Often miscategorized as hyperrealism, Han explains that the essence of his paintings lies in the human spirit, therefore, he is an expressionist painter.

In the exhibition FACE, red and black are ruling the aluminum plates. These two colors hold special meanings in the artist’s paintings. While red and black both symbolize human desire, red is the desire that erupts, and black is the conflict. Han believes that “the core of painting is to bring out the essence of existence through facing the existence, and the role of painting is to act as a pathway to connect the material to the mind”. Han is particularly excited to be showing his works in Hong Kong - as Hong Kong is one of his favorite cities. He hopes that the viewers will be able to look beneath the surface and explore the deeper layers of his paintings.

HK H Queen's 7-8/F

 

7-8/F, H Queen's, 80 Queen's Road Central, Hong Kong

Tel: +852 2523 8001


Opening Hours: 11:00 - 19:00
Closed: Sunday / Monday

More Info

ARTIST

HAN YOUNG WOOK
Born in 1963 in Korea, Han Youngwook graduated from Hongik University, obtaining Bachelor and Master degrees in Painting. Academically trained in one of the best art departments in Korea, Han focuses on painting techniques and materials, and he has adopted the traditions of Hyperrealism. However, over the years he often questions the nature of painting – Are artists painting what the picture requires them to paint? What is the difference between factual representation and the true fact itself? For Han, he opts for using extensive lines to illustrate, through which he hopes the viewers could see the true fact and sense something unprecedented. His subject matter is often "anonymous portraits", as for him they reflect the irregularities of human society and life, but fundamentally there embedded with Han's love and trust towards humanism. Han Youngwook's works have gained him awards in 2006, including the Grand Prize at the 7th Sin-SalmDang Grand Art Exhibition, and the Grand Prize at the 34th Kang-Won Grand Art Exhibition. Since his first solo exhibition at Galerie Bhak in Seoul, he has widely exhibited around the world including Karlsruhe (Germany), Miami (USA), Tokyo (Japan), and Shanghai (China).
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