JH

Suji Park Terrace Installation

AA
View Discussion
Suji Park, Meonji Soojibga | Dust Collector 2022, ceramic (mixed porcelain stoneware and local clays), glaze, ceramic paints and epoxy clay and resin, Commissioned by Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, 2022. Photographer: Paul Chapman Suji Park, Meonji Soojibga | Dust Collector 2022, ceramic (mixed porcelain stoneware and local clays), glaze, ceramic paints and epoxy clay and resin, Commissioned by Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, 2022, photographer: Jungwoo Lee Suji Park, Meonji Soojibga | Dust Collector 2022, ceramic (mixed porcelain stoneware and local clays), glaze, ceramic paints and epoxy clay and resin, Commissioned by Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, 2022. Photographer: Jungwoo Lee Suji Park, Meonji Soojibga | Dust Collector, 2022, ceramic (mixed porcelain stoneware and local clays), glaze, ceramic paints and epoxy clay and resin, Commissioned by Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, 2022. Photographer: Jennifer French Suji Park, Meonji Soojibga | Dust Collector, 2022, ceramic (mixed porcelain stoneware and local clays), glaze, ceramic paints and epoxy clay and resin, Commissioned by Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, 2022. Photographer: Jennifer French Suji Park, Meonji Soojibga | Dust Collector, 2022, ceramic (mixed porcelain stoneware and local clays), glaze, ceramic paints and epoxy clay and resin, Commissioned by Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, 2022. Photographer: Jungwoo Lee Suji Park, Meonji Soojibga | Dust Collector, 2022, ceramic (mixed porcelain stoneware and local clays), glaze, ceramic paints and epoxy clay and resin, Commissioned by Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, 2022. Photographer: Jennifer French Suji Park, Meonji Soojibga | Dust Collector, 2022, ceramic (mixed porcelain stoneware and local clays), glaze, ceramic paints and epoxy clay and resin, Commissioned by Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, 2022, photographer: Jungwoo Lee Suji Park, Meonji Soojibga | Dust Collector, 2022, ceramic (mixed porcelain stoneware and local clays), glaze, ceramic paints and epoxy clay and resin, Commissioned by Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, 2022, photographer: Jungwoo Lee Suji Park, Meonji Soojibga | Dust Collector, 2022, ceramic (mixed porcelain stoneware and local clays), glaze, ceramic paints and epoxy clay and resin, Commissioned by Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, 2022. Photographer: Jennifer French Suji Park, Meonji Soojibga | Dust Collector, 2022, ceramic (mixed porcelain stoneware and local clays), glaze, ceramic paints and epoxy clay and resin, Commissioned by Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, 2022. Photographer: Jungwoo Lee Suji Park, Meonji Soojibga | Dust Collector, 2022, ceramic (mixed porcelain stoneware and local clays), glaze, ceramic paints and epoxy clay and resin, Commissioned by Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, 2022. Photographer: Jennifer French Suji Park, Meonji Soojibga | Dust Collector, 2022, ceramic (mixed porcelain stoneware and local clays), glaze, ceramic paints and epoxy clay and resin, Commissioned by Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, 2022. Photographer: Paul Chapman Suji Park, Meonji Soojibga | Dust Collector, 2022, ceramic (mixed porcelain stoneware and local clays), glaze, ceramic paints and epoxy clay and resin, Commissioned by Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, 2022. Photographer: Jennifer French Suji Park, Meonji Soojibga | Dust Collector, 2022, ceramic (mixed porcelain stoneware and local clays), glaze, ceramic paints and epoxy clay and resin, Commissioned by Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, 2022. Photographer: Jennifer French

And although Park mentions the influence of different types of Korean village guardian totems, her swelling forms and undulating or writhing contours also relate to Picasso's ceramics, the large vertical pots of Barry Bricknell, Minoan goddess figures and more. You can tell she is familiar with much art history, for her wild use of colour (sometimes with horizontal lines of hued ‘mortar') is connected to avantgarde painting groups like CoBrA; especially when rendering bug-eyed faces with pouting mouths.

Auckland

 

Suji Park
Meonji Soojibga / Dust Collector

 


2 July, 2022 - 2 April, 2023

For this show on the smaller top floor terrace above the cafe, Suji Park presents nine ceramic totemic figures on eleven (sometimes butted together) plinths, with some works presented as a pair on the same support.

In a sense the thin-legged plinths in this installation are almost as an important element as the heavy ceramics that are like wonky stacks of bowls. The plinths consist of tables, benches, and stands that have vertically rippled glass glued to their spindly struts that extends down to the concrete aggregate floor. Sometimes the wooden legs extend out diagonally—not vertically—with the above planar wooden surfaces covered with flaking pale grey paint.

The opaque sculptures and transparent plinths are of different heights and thicknesses. The dominant colour on the bowl-like heads and limbless torsos is usually a muted tinted variation of brown or grey, with occasional of slashes of saturated chroma, often within button patterns and on one work, a bright blue finned head.

Park’s methods of glaze application are surprisingly painterly, her use of colour (within porcelain, stoneware and fired local clays) subtly gorgeous, as is her exuberant use of striated or punctured texture: repeating v-lines, dashes or dots to make delicately ethereal fields on hard curved surfaces.

And although Park mentions the influence of different types of Korean village guardian totems, her swelling forms and undulating or writhing contours also relate to Picasso’s ceramics, the large vertical pots of Barry Brickell, Minoan goddess figures, the sculptures of Louise Bourgeois, even Alberto Giacometti, and more. You can tell this dazzling colourist and relentless decorator of surfaces is familiar with much western art history, for sometimes her wild use of colour (with horizontal or diagonal lines of hued ‘mortar’) seems connected to avantgarde painting groups like CoBrA, especially when rendering bug-eyed faces with pouting mouths.

In fact the talismanic presence of these ‘guardians’ is such that even the two security surveillance cameras on the outer gallery walls start to look like peering cycloptic heads guarding the exhibition, scrutinising your every move and making you self-conscious and twitchy.

What the exhibition shows as well is that Park loves creating the bodily sculptural experience and that her use of translucent glass and skeletal wooden plinths is crucial for that; getting the desired height for the confrontational ‘faces,’ not over-accentuating the bases or ground visually so that the hefty works ‘float’ in mid-space; creating a hovering dream zone. The works are calculatedly inelegant, yet with their apparent spontaneity, incredibly beautiful and nuanced.

Being outside in a spot where harsh sunlight can penetrate and dominate, also lets the show gradually change over each hour with the movement of skinny dark shadows, arcs of brilliant sunshine, and nuanced shifts of light reflecting and refracting through the rippled glass plinths. Several visits to this richly surfaced display (packed with restless inventiveness and raw materiality) will bring for the observant multiple rewards.

John Hurrell

Print | Facebook | Twitter | Email

 

Recent Posts by John Hurrell

JH
Installation of Bambury and May works at Sumer

Wall-Reflected vs Frontal, Directly-Radiating, Colour

SUMER

Stephen Bambury & Anne-Marie May

 

The Still Point of the Turning World

 

26 March - 26 April 2025

JH
Virginia Leonard, Eating with Blue Blood and Village Knickers, 2025, clay, resin and lustre, 400 x 500mm plus ceramic tray.

Leonard’s Aesthetic….Hmm?

GOW LANGSFORD GALLERY

Virginia Leonard

 

The Wedding Breakfast: An Ode to Olly

 

26 March - 19 April 2025

JH
George Watson, Fields 3, detail,  hand dyed silk, fence batons, staples, 2300 x 230 mm overall

George Watson at Coastal Signs

COASTAL SIGNS

George Watson

 

The Farm

 

7 March - 12 April 2025

JH
Laith McGregor, S.O.S., 2025, clay and enamel, dimensions variable.

Performing Magic (with Anxiety)

STARKWHITE

Laith McGregor

 


Long Days, Longer Nights

 


15 March - 15 April 2025