Kang Seung Lee
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Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.This artwork features a single focal point - a small, grainy black-and-white photograph of a child sitting and embracing something. The composition is stark and minimalistic, with the photograph centered on a plain white background. The artist's use of this simple, understated approach suggests a contemplative, introspective tone. The distinctive photographic technique lends the piece a nostalgic, almost antiquated quality, hinting at themes of memory, innocence, and the passage of time. While the specific identity of the subject is not revealed, the intimate, tender pose evokes a sense of vulnerability and the universality of the human experience. ...
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Kang Seung Lee
1978 , American/South KoreanKang Seung Lee’s practice seeks both to illuminate and to create new critical, cross-cultural queer histories. Born in South Korea but having lived in Latin America and the Middle East, Seung Lee is concerned with excavating material – such as artworks, artefacts and publications, from public and private archives, for example libraries, museums and private collections – that sheds light on non-Western marginalised experiences and suppressed histories. Through the artist’s meticulous process of research, hidden narratives and personal accounts, divergent with hegemonic and linear histories, begin to emerge. Expressing his findings with graphite pencil, paintings on transformed canvases, garments, ceramics, film footage and Polaroid images, Kang Seung Lee sees these alternative, counter-narratives as dictating strategies and tactics for the liberation of marginalised peoples. Written by Goldsmiths CCA ...
Kang Seung Lee: Artworks
Commonwealth and Council
Los Angeles, Mexico CityCommonwealth and Council is a gallery in Koreatown, Los Angeles founded in 2010. Our program is rooted in our commitment to explore how a community of artists can sustain our co-existence through generosity and hospitality. Commonwealth and Council celebrates our manifold identities and experiences through the shared dialogue of art—championing practices by women, queer, POC, and our ally artists to build counter-histories that reflect our individual and collective realities.