Hungry Like the Wolf

2015

February 23 – March 14

LNC Lobby

 

Curators

SUGs Directors

Contributing Artists

Jiayu Liu, Taehoon Kim, Michelle Seo, Tif Sung

Exhibition Statement as Preserved in the SUGS/SITE Archives:

Hungry like the wolf is an exhibition co-curated by the Student Union Galleries Directors, presenting the works of artists Jiayu Liu (BFA 2016), Taehoon Kim (MFA 2015), Michelle Seo (BFA 2015), and Tif Sung (MFA 2015). CHildhood tales, innuendo, dog whispering and uninhibited markings are implied throughout the exhibition. Displays of human duality in emotion and experience transform the LeRoy Neiman Center with humor and allegory. Vibrant colors mask the dark underpinnings of the works, reminiscent of the credulous feeling of encountering a wolf in a grandmother’s nightgown. Jiayu Liu’s paintings explore the connection between childhood memories and his emotional state. Painted with a willingness towards informality, they adopt contrasting ideas of innocence and impurity, youthful and mature, the humane and animalistic, to exhibit the very anture of human beings. His paintings are inspired by the innuendo of personality and sex in the Chinese character ‘Xing’. In Play Tuoluo with My Father, the artist combines the perspectives of both child and adult which hinges on the hypothesis that past memories fade away due to the strong presence of a looming dark reality. In his self-portrait, the artist makes playful fun of himself with the title Monkey King in order to challenge the animalistic nature inside human bodies. Resounding througout his work is the influence of Chinese philosopher San Zi Jing’s statement, “Man at birth is fundamentally good in nature”, the first sentence of the philosophers book Three Character Classic. Taehoon Kim’s work evokes a place between the subconscious and the evolution of substance. he uses materials that are modified and hybridized, as a metaphor for amorphous communication and the struggle for psychological interaction between humans and animals. His works ask us to consider our orgiins and how mankind has evolved physically and emotionally. By examininf how other species communicate and how to read these communications is apparent only through the understanding of our own consious, unconsous, and subconsious self. For instance, animal communicators interact with other species by reading their minds or catching invisible cues, while bontanists study how plants intelligently use hormones to evolve mechanisms for that sustain life. The crystalline structure of water is receptive to the emotion present within the human voice. His work attempts to reveal and develop a persuasive reflection on the essence of humanity and our relationships with other creatures. Michelle Seo’s circular structure, that sits atop of three heads, alludes to the large rocks found in Zen gardens. The “rock” protects its interior counterparts, which can be viewed through slits in the work. The vessel’s exterior protects a negative interior space, while also manifesting the exisitence of an interior voume by “outlining” it through its exterior shape. Exploring these boundaries between outer and inner surfaces speaks to the intersecting relationships between the self, society, and sultural landscapes. Tif Sung’s ceramic scupltures, allude to Japanese Haniwa tomb sculptures and chinese tomb pillars. Through experimentation with youthful art materials such as wax crayons, lead, and chalk, the surafce is inscribed with scrawls, scribbles, playful graffiti-esque marks, images inspired by Chinese landscape paintings, and traces imitative of the consequence of weathering and decay. The forms point towards an intersection between contemporary and historical legacies, optimistically evocative of certain universal and familiar expeirence; the need for legible language and translation is absent.

Programs

March 10, 4:00-6:00 PM

LNC Lobby

Exhibition Material

   

Hungry Like the Wolf was featured in SAIC’s E + D Spring 2015 newsletters.

This newsletter is stored in SAIC’s digital collection.