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Biennale 2023-2024: SELF MEDICATION / PAŠTERAPIJA

  • Writer: Valentins Petjko
    Valentins Petjko
  • Oct 4, 2023
  • 5 min read

Updated: Jun 19

Self-Medication: Korean Ceramic Art

Exhibition at Riga Decorative Art and Design Museum, 5 October 2023 - 14 January 2024

 

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Self-Medication: Korean Ceramic Art is opened as part of the guest country exhibition at the Latvia Ceramics Biennale 2023. This show highlights the latest in contemporary Korean ceramic art, which has built a strong presence in the global topography of contemporary ceramic art by shedding light on different artworks, and in turn, explores the future of ceramic art and the core values that the ceramic art field as a whole, including that in Latvia, must strive for.

It is close to impossible to define contemporary ceramic art in succinct terms. Many genres of art are converging with clay as the medium, and the forms and expressions of ceramics are being reorganized and expanded. Meanwhile, media art, photography, and performance art, are sometimes seen as new parts of ceramic art. However the question remains whether the increased use of ceramics as a medium can in fact be seen as the fruits of ceramic art. Self- Medication: Korean Ceramic Art is an attempt at determining the origin and center for Korean ceramics within the expanding borders of ceramic art, and aims to contemplate over the future direction for Korean ceramics.

Contemporary Korean ceramics arose from the desire to reconnect with severed traditions when the country was left in disarray after independence and the subsequent Korean War (1950-1953). It began to take shape as the Korean ceramics scene started to embrace Western styles and ceramics courses were established in universities in the early 1960s. Most works were rooted in tradition until the early 1970s. However, rapid economic growth, changes in culture and the community, and increased international exchange led to form-centric ceramic trends beginning from the late 1970s into the early 1980s. Furthermore, as postmodernism began to take hold of the art world, including the ceramics field, more artists began to experiment with themes, materials, and techniques after the 1980s. The National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Korea held an exhibition entitled The Thirty Years of Korean Contemporary Ceramic Art in 1994, which was an overview of contemporary ceramics from an art historical point of view. Soon afterwards in 2001, the Gyeonggi World Ceramic Exposition was held with the aim of fostering the ceramics industry in Gyeonggi-do and promoting Korean ceramic culture around the world. The event allowed the Korean audience to share the expanded horizon of ceramics, rekindle their interest in ceramics, and became the chance for Korean ceramic art to find a home for itself on the world stage. Since the 2000s, Korean ceramics has been integrating new technologies and approaches to values, sensibilities, and media based on different cultures through exchanges with the outer world. Now, Korean ceramics is part of a wave of new culture and change as crafts, design, and the wider artistic realm intersect, overlap, and expand. Ceramic art, which set forth from the headwaters of traditional ceramics, has converged with different waterways and is now headed for the deep, wide ocean. Where are we heading now? If the sea is the scope of Korean ceramics, then what can we find in the deepest, most secretive depths of the ocean? Self-Medication: Korean Ceramic Art poses questions to the ceramic art community as a form of medication for these questions and urges us to fiercely answer them.

Compared to contemporary art, there is a sore lack of academic research and critical discussion on ceramic art. The definition, evaluation, potential, and outlook always come from the outside in, and contemporary ceramics’ half-hearted, hesitant voice wasn’t enough to persuade the rest of the world. Before seeking advice from the outside regarding how ceramic art may move forward (or perhaps drift forward) I hope that it regains recognition and gains the ability to foresee its own future prospects thereby getting the traction to move forward by its own accord. This is what Self-Medication: Korean Ceramic Art aims to voice.

This exhibition is not about shedding light on the 16 Korean ceramic artists’ art-making processes, nor is it about learning about their worlds of art. These artists that represent 16 different facets of Korean ceramic art are case studies of artistic practice that push us all to apply ourselves and overcome hurdles. I hope that these examples can serve as a sort of nautical chart that enables us to review our perspectives and experiences, discovering and navigating pathways through each individual’s world. The new definition of ceramic art must be a home and an ecosystem for various artistic genres to live and coexist within, and a common pool or resource, entailing the concept of integration instead of division.

 

Leeji Choi, Curator

Gyeonggi Museum of Contemporary Ceramic Art

 

Cooperation between the Latvian Centre for Contemporary Ceramics and the Gyeonggi Museum of Contemporary Ceramic Art in Korea began in 2021 when the two institutions discussed possible exhibition exchanges. Self-Medication: Korean Ceramic Art is our Korean partners’ response to Safe Horizons – a vast exhibition of Baltic contemporary ceramics held at the Gyeonggi Museum of Ceramic Design in Yeoju in 2022–2023. The new exhibition is a significant event in the Latvia Ceramics Biennale programme.  The Biennale theme is Troubled Waters, inviting the artists to offer their personal take on its cosmogenic connotations. On top of that, the restless flow of water is an apt, compelling metaphor for flight of thought, a fine material approximation for the physically intangible. In this intriguing context, Self-Medication tells the emergence story of Korean contemporary ceramics with a strong focus on “self-growth” achieved by nurturing traditions and extracting from the heritage of yesteryear that which is timeless and will nourish both the culture of the present and its future progress in the years to come.

 

Valentīns Petjko

Aivars Baranovskis

Latvian Centre for Contemporary Ceramics


Pašterapija: Korejas laikmetīgās keramikas izstāde

Dekoratīvās mākslas un dizaina muzejs Rīgā, 05.10.2023.-14.01.2024.


Pašterapija: Korejas keramikas māksla ir viesvalsts izstāde 4. Latvijas Keramikas biennāles programmā. Tā izceļ jaunākās tendences Korejas laikmetīgajā keramikā, kas ir izpelnījusies pamatotu atpazīstamību pasaules keramikas mākslas ainavā, un vērš skatu nākotnē, reflektējot pa medija rītdienu un fundamentālām vērtībām, uz kurām būtu jātiecas nozares pārstāvjiem visā pasaulē, tostarp Latvijā.

 

Šī izstāde neizvirza mērķi pilnībā izgaismot sešpadsmit Korejas keramiķu jaunrades procesus, nedz arī mēģina izglītot par viņu mākslinieciskajām pasaulēm. Šie autori pārstāv sešpadsmit atšķirīgas šķautnes Korejas keramikas mākslā un iemieso sešpadsmit jaunrades prakses gadījuma pētījumus, kas mudina mūs visus tiekties uz augšu un pārvarēt šķēršļus. Ceru, šie piemēri kalpos par sava veida navigācijas karti, kas palīdzēs mums katram pārskatīt savus priekšstatus un pieredzes, atklāt jaunus izaugsmes ceļus un neapmaldīties savā iekšējā pasaulē. Medija jaunajā definīcijā keramikas mākslai ir jākļūst par mājām un ekosistēmu, kur var mierpilni sadzīvot dažādi žanri; par kopīgu radošās jaudas krātuvi jeb resursu, kas paredz savstarpēju iekļaušanos, nevis šķelšanos.

 

Sadarbība starp Latvijas Laikmetīgās keramikas centru un Kjongi Laikmetīgās keramikas mākslas muzeju Korejā sākās 2021. gadā, kad radās ideja par iespējamiem izstāžu apmaiņas projektiem. Pašterapija: Korejas keramikas māksla ir Korejas partneru atbildes izstāde Latvijas Laikmetīgās keramikas centra rīkotajai Baltijas laikmetīgās keramikas izstādei Drošie horizonti, kas 2022.–2023. gadā notika Korejā, Jodžu pilsētā, KjongiKeramikas dizaina muzejā. Izstāde ir zīmīgs notikums Latvijas Keramikas biennāles programmā. Šogad Latvijas keramikas biennāles tēma ir Nemierīgie ūdeņi, kas runā par pasaules radīšanu. Ūdens nemierīgais plūdums šeit kļūst par domu plūsmas un materializēšanās metaforu. Savukārt Pašterapija ir materializēts stāsts par Korejas laikmetīgās keramikas tapšanu jeb “pašizaugsmi”, nesaraujot saiknes ar tradīcijām un smeļot no pagātnes vērtīgāko – to, kas spēj stāvēt pāri laikam, stiprinot tagadnes un nākotnes kultūru.


Kuratore

Lidži Čoi (Kjongi Laikmetīgās keramikas mākslas muzejs)

 

Koordinatori

Valentīns Petjko (Latvijas Laikmetīgās keramikas centrs)

Aivars Baranovskis (Latvijas Laikmetīgās keramikas centrs)

Dace Ļaviņa (Dekoratīvās mākslas un dizaina muzejs)

 

Izstādes dizains

Valentīns Petjko (Latvijas Laikmetīgās keramikas centrs)

Aivars Baranovskis (Latvijas Laikmetīgās keramikas centrs)



 
 
 

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