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Marian DREW /KOON Wai Bong/ Chris LANGLOIS/Ho-Yeol RYU/David SMITH
exhibition location:
Amelia Johnson Contemporary
LG/F 91 – 95 Hollywood Road, (off Shin Hing Street)
NoHo, Central, Hong Kong
Gallery Hours:
Tues – Sat: 10.30 – 6.30 pm
Other times by appointment
Amelia Johnson Contemporary is delighted to present an exhibition on the theme of Landscape and the Urban
Environment. Featuring five international artists, the works have been carefully selected by independent
curator and art consultant Georgia Manifold to examine the revived interest in landscape by contemporary
artists. Today artists continue to explore landscape as subject matter, but for different purposes. The
landscapes are now manipulated, re-appropriated and re-imagined by contemporary artists to not only
challenge the traditional trajectory of art history, but also to comment on the social and political forces that
shape our surroundings. The exhibition traces the evolving image of the landscape in art globally moving from
the literal interactions to the conceptual manipulations of the present day. Encompassing painting,
photography, sculpture and video, this exhibition illustrates landscape imagery mediated through natural
selection, imagination, and technology, affording a second look at both the natural and the manmade.
Marian Drew is one of Australia's most
significant contemporary photographic artists. Her practice,
spanning more than twenty years, is characterised by
innovation and exploration of photo-media. Taken from the
Australiana series, this highly regarded artist presents unsettling
and beautiful photographs that serve as a reminder of the
fragility of life and the impact that man has on our natural
environment. The fallen bodies of indigenous Australian fauna
are contrasted by the sensuous draped cloths, seductive
colours and dramatic lighting. Her photographs have many
layers of meanings and references, most obviously 18th Century
still life paintings and the Vanitas of the 16th Century. Her work
raises uncomfortable questions about contemporary
relationships to animals and how we inherit and adapt cultural
ideas. Other dualities are referred to: natural and artificial, contemporary and historic, life and death, and light
and dark. Drew has held over 20 solo shows across Australia, United States, France and Germany and is
currently represented by galleries in the United States and Australia. Her work is held is many major public
and private collections across Australia including Australian National Gallery, Queensland Art Gallery, South
Australian Art Gallery and in the J. Paul Getty Museum in the USA. Currently, Drew is an Associate Professor
at Queensland College of Art, Griffith University.
Unpolluted nature as depicted by the classical artists of China in their ink paintings
represents for Koon Wai Bong the pure origin of the art of landscape painting. Using the traditional medium of
ink on paper, he reinterprets these ancient landscapes through his re-examining of the contemporary world.
The hybridity of his work effectively reconciles Chinese tradition with Western modernism, involving a wide
spectrum of processes: from acceptance, adaption, appropriation and application, to revision, resistance and
rejection of the Western model. Koon Wai Bong was born in Hong Kong and trained at the Chinese University
of Hong Kong where he received his B.A. and M.F.A. Currently teaching at the Academy of Visual Arts at the
HK Baptist University, Koon is shortly to be awarded his fine arts doctorate degree from the Royal Melbourne
Institute of Technology. Exhibited extensively in Hong Kong, the work of Koon Wai Bong can be found in
several collections including the permanent collection of the Hong Kong Museum of Art.
Chris Langlois’ paintings concentrate on landscapes that are filled with vast
distances and large panoramas that undoubtedly point to a sense
of longing. Atmosphere and weather are the two main focal
points for Langlois which he evokes through a powerful absence
of colour. The aesthetic beauty of the artist’s work is manifested
through the blurring technique, which denotes the collective
memory and the unconscious. The artist sees the paintings as an
auditory, musical response to the landscape where the narrative
is the experience of being in the landscape. He juxtaposes and
blends things together, abstraction and non-abstraction, real and
unreal, the aesthetics of media, eg painting and photography.
The Darkwood series is a continuation of that theme, of painting
landscape and depicting the space and the effect it has on us,
specifically exploring landscape through distortion, through
photography and its limitations, and how obstructions in the field
of view can twist and obscure vision.
The fundamental theme behind Ho-Yeol
Ryu's animations and photographs is to question simple
perceptions of reality. He aims to present seemingly impossible
situations or phenomena and, through the use of digital
manipulation, to alter them to a parallel unreality. Life is thereby
recreated but from another, unreal perspective. Ryu's animation
does not attempt to emulate the look and feel of film but instead
represents the movement of the leaves on the tree and their
behaviour when influenced by wind, sky and the time of day.
Using rectangular blocks to create the leaves and a limited
palette of blue and white the sound of the wind in the leaves
and the rise and fall of the leaves evoke both the mood of the
scene and the feel of the weather. Born in Seoul in 1971, Ryu
completed his Bachelor of Fine Arts Degree in Sculpture at Chung-Ang University in Seoul before obtaining
his Masters Degree from the Braunschweig School of Art in Germany. Ryu has exhibited extensively and
internationally and has work in several prominent collections.
An Irish artist based in Hong Kong, David Smith’s work suggests a sense of transience,
a feeling of being in a place, yet not in it fully. The subjects are often isolated, cropped or momentary, showing
interplay between architectural/man made elements like buildings, tankers, jets and changeable environmental
conditions like light, weather and pollution. The processes involved are central to the work, employing washes
and the chemical qualities of oil to disrupt, dissolve, shroud or alter a piece. The small scale of the paintings is
a deliberate attempt to engage with the polarity of depicting vast, elusive spaces on an intimate scale. The
overall intent is to present works that are open ended and spare, in scale, content and treatment. The idea of
something or somewhere being empty, shrouded, isolated or suggested is intriguing and works as potential for
the audience to fill.
For further details on the exhibition, detailed artist biographies & images please contact the
gallery on (852) 2548 2286 or info@ajc-art.com.
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