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Lot n° 259

Kim TSCHANG-YEUL

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Non Communiqué
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(Magsan, Korea, 1929 – 2021 Seoul, Southern Korea) Recurrence, 1997, signed and dated on the side, oil and acrylic on canvas, 194 x 161 cm, on the stretcher This work is accompanied by a certificate of authenticity from the Estate of Kim Tschang-Yeul, France Provenance: European Private Collection“I lived with the seriousness of someone who has caught a tiger by the tail…” RECURRENCE Kim Tschang-Yeul passed away in early January 2021, at the age of 91. He was a central figure among the generation of artists at the vanguard of postwar Korean modernism, a painter who spent the past five decades focusing on his iconic depictions of water drops. He is considered one of the preeminent figures in the establishment of contemporary Korean art on the international scene, alongside Nam June Paik and Lee Ufan. After living in Pyongyang, Seoul, New York and eventually Paris, the water drop became the starting point for a singular and iconic body of work, which stands at the confluence of lyrical abstraction, Pop Art and Chinese calligraphy. His minimalistic and lucid limpid œuvre subtly fuses Taoist wisdom, modern conceptual irony and the tragedy of war. Early years in Korea Born in Maengsan, in modern-day North Korea in 1929, Kim began studying calligraphy with his grandfather at the age of four. He was a key member of a generation of artists who adopted radical practices in the 1950s in South Korea and then spread them beyond its borders. Showing an early talent for art, he began an art degree at Seoul National University in 1949, but his studies were interrupted by the Korean War, an experience that marked him forever. “All I could think of was weeping or yelling”, he said in an interview in 2018. “I went back to painting in order to vent my rage.” In the coming years, Kim Tschang-Yeul channeled the violence of the conflict into abstractions made of slashing marks and brooding colors. Kim led the Korean “Art Informel” movement in the 1950s and 1960s. This movement greatly inspired many avant-garde artists of the next generation in rejecting the conservative values imposed on them by Korean military dictatorship, such as Lee Ufan, Name June Paik and Park Seo-Bo. Shortly after his participation in the Paris Biennale in 1961 and the São Paulo Biennale in 1965, Kim moved to New York and studied there from 1966 to 1968. His time spent in New York allowed him to interact with and be inspired by the Pop Art movement, which was a significant influence. Because of his years abroad, Kim developed his art outside of the Seoul and Tokyo art scene, thus developing his unique style in parallel to the “Dansaekhwa” movement. From New York to Paris Kim Tschang-Yeul was part of a generation of Korean artists that travelled beyond East Asia in order to develop a more universal approach to painting. In 1965, he received a grant from the Rockefeller Foundation which enabled him to move to New York in order to study at the Art Students’ League of New York from 1966 to 1968. Kim’s years spent in New York allowed him to interact with the overwhelming visibility of Pop Art and Minimalist sculpture, which impeded the artist’s pursuit of an idiosyncratic style. Eventually settling in Paris after participating in the Avant-Garde Festival with help from Nam June Paik, Kim Tschang-Yeul began painting water, building upon the fluid shapes he was already experimenting with. It was in Paris, in fact, that the artist first embarked on his monumental water drop painting titled Événement de la Nuit (1972), where a single oversized water drop hangs, its shadow projected against the dark ground; within the droplet is a reflection of the window of the artist’s studio. Ever since, over fifty years, he continued to present works featuring water droplets that would become his trademark. Water Drops and Calligraphy As the story goes, he was in his 40s, indigent and working at nighttime in a former stable in a Paris suburb. Unhappy with a painting, he splashed water on it intending to clear away the paint. When he returned in the morning, he was transfixed by the drops remaining on the canvas and reflecting the morning light. “It was spectacular”, he said in a recent interview. “It was like a symphony. I took pictures of them and started thinking about how to express them on a canvas. Thus, began my lifelong task.” For Kim, the waterdrop is a sort of meditation, a way to free himself from the scars the war experience had left him with. There is something almost obsessive in these 48 year-long repetitions of a single motif. It’s a never-ending struggle to come to terms with his past, to turn “anger, unease, and fear into emptiness”, as he wrote, in order to “experience peace and harmony.” “For me, thinking about transparent water drops is an act of making bad things go away. I’ve dissolved and erased horrible memories by painting them cou

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