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GaHee Park Unsettles Still Life Traditions with Surreal, Soured Temptations — Colossal

February 16, 2024 - Art



Art

#food
#GaHee Park
#painting
#still life
#surreal

February 16, 2024

Grace Ebert

a painting of a figure resting on a dinner table with fish, peaches, and a champagne flute with purple liquid and an eye inside it

“Drowned Thought” (2023), oil on linen, 90 x 67 inches. Photo by Paul Litherland. All images courtesy of GaHee Park and Perrotin, shared with permission

In a brief email exchange about her work, GaHee Park references freedom several times. The Seoul-born, Montréal-based artist wants to liberate herself from realism and infuse her paintings with the expressive, simplified qualities of abstraction, creating decadent scenes with recurring motifs like eyes and fish. “I like to think about every subject of my work, including animals and human figures, as part of a still life. That gives me more freedom to make images,” she shares.

Working in flat planes of oil on linen, Park envisions surreal tablescapes and moments of intimacy gone awry, and she begins each piece with a preliminary sketch. “Sometimes I keep these drawings for a few years in a drawer until my confidence in the image grows, and I am ready to make it a painting,” she says. “I often use some images or motifs from previous paintings so I can play with familiar forms more freely, exploring variations to go deeper into those subjects.”

Park often returns to flesh, whether it be on the human body, fruit, or fish. Appearing seductive yet spoiled by hordes of ants or incongruous feelings, the more carnal aspects of her works reflect on the pains and pleasures of being alive in the world. In pieces like “Drowned Thought” and “Waiting with the Fishes,” eyes float in glasses filled with colorful liquids, “reflecting different emotions and states of consciousness,” she says. The motif “could be to freeze a particular moment or show multiple moments or states of mind at the same time.”

Fish have a more personal role for the artist. “My grandmother sold fresh fish in a market in Korea, and I have always spent time with (dead) fish and seafood. Observing them from a young age probably makes me want to paint them,” she says. “There’s something familiar about them for me, but they also still seem very alien.”

Park will open her next solo show, Fun and Games, on February 24 at Perrotin in New York and currently has a piece on view in 50 Paintings at the Milwaukee Art Museum. Follow her work on Instagram.

 

four figures appear bisected by thin vines of green leaves. one woman's hand with pointed fingernails rests on a darkened shoulder

“Three Faces and a Shadow” (2021), oil on canvas, 52 x 48 inches. Photo by Tanguy Beurdeley

a tablescape with a green lamp, shrimp cocktail, and cutlery. a cat peeks behind a pink curtain in the backdrop. another cat sits near a champagne flute looking out at rippling waves on the right

“Cat with a View” (2022), oil on canvas, 60 x 80 inches. Photo by Marion Paquette

a painting of a woman resting her hand and hand on a table with a plate of fish in front of her, plus half a lime, and a glass with purple liquid and an eye inside of it

“Waiting with the Fishes” (2023), oil on linen, 25 x 24 inches. Photo by Paul Litherland

two women rest on a table with a blue blanket cloaking their bodies and a red curtain in the background. a vase with white flowers sits on the table along with numerous ants and two glasses with green and pink liquid and eyes

“Half Asleep Night” (2022), oil on canvas, 34 x 41 inches. Photo by Elad Sarig. Image courtesy of the artist and Nassima Landau

a painting fragmented by thin green vines with a nude woman, fish, and a man resting his head in between

“Touch I” (2022), oil on canvas, 40 x 48 inches. Photo by Paul Litherland

a painting of a table with two olives on a toothpick, a fish head with bone, and shrimp in a cocktail glass. A person peeks through the blinds in the background with fingers that resemble shrimp tails

“Seafood Dream” (2020), oil on canvas, 24 x 25 inches. Photo by Guillaume Ziccarelli

thin green vines fragment a painting with green leaves, a nude woman, a nude man, and a figure in black and white

“Touch II” (2022), oil on canvas, 40 x 48 inches. Photo by Paul Litherland

a vibrant bouquet rests on a table with slugs beneath

“Still Life with Slugs” (2022), oil on canvas, 38 x 32 inches. Photo by Marion Paquette

#food
#GaHee Park
#painting
#still life
#surreal

 

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