Kim Yong-Ik
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The artwork displays an abstract composition featuring repetitive white circular shapes against a muted beige background. The distinct polka dot pattern creates a visually striking and dynamic effect, with the circular forms appearing to float and move across the canvas. The overall style reflects a minimalist approach, relying on simple geometric shapes and a limited color palette to convey a sense of playfulness and whimsy. This piece likely reflects the artist's exploration of the relationship between positive and negative space, as well as the visual interplay of pattern and texture. ...
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Kim Yong-Ik
B.1947Influenced by Dansaekhwa, the Korean monochrome painting, and the Japanese Mono-ha movement, Kim Yong-Ik established his career in the late 1970s with his Plane Object paintings, a series of airbrush paintings on unstretched canvases that relate to these traditions. In the 1980s, having completed a thesis on Marcel Duchamp, Kim moved from the ‘Plane Object’ series to more abstract and geometric languages. During the 1980s and 1990s, he developed increasingly experimental work by using scraps and thus including forces greater than his own imprint, such as stains, hair or dust. By the early 1990s, Kim develops his “polka dot” series consisting of paintings depicting simple and serialized arrangements of circles. In 1999, Kim helped establish one of Korea’s leading exhibition spaces known as “art space pool.” ...