
South Korean artist Chun Kwang Young creates art that embodies an argument about tradition and new technologies. Although his art doesn't literally showcase some of the technologies, or any of the technologies, that are part of our contemporary world, he does bring up discourse between the different medias of the ages. His
website showcases all of his work.
_100dpi(1).jpg)
Chun has spent his recent art career, the 90s till present, exploring the transformation of ideas and arguments. He creates thousands--and I mean literally thousands and thousands, of Styrofoam triangles of various sizes that he wraps in traditional Korean mulberry paper. The paper was used extensively in the literary world of Korea for all of the modern era. Books, newspapers, posters, food wrap, etc, are all things that mulberry paper was used for. Chun takes these old papers that he collects and forms them into medicine packages--the triangles. He then takes these triangles and makes surfaces out of them. He makes weird lunar and extraterrestrial surfaces. The alien and hostel surfaces of his artwork create a dialogue that suggests something futuristic and progressive, contrasting the tone and ideas of the mulberry paper.
Chun is an artist that is rooted in tradition but is being pulled and changed by our contemporary society. He ask questions about whether or not this is good or bad. He wants to understand the implications of our society and remind us of the great traditions we come from, while also being excited about the future and the different ideas that can be provoked from it.
.jpg)