Opening in the presence of the artist on Wednesday, June 11th from 6:30pm to 8:30pm.
PRESS RELEASE
Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac is pleased to present Korean artist Jeon Joonhoʼs first show in the
galleryʼs project room, which will feature a video work as well as a sculpture.
In the digitally animated video piece, Panic Disorderius (2007), as in all of Jeonʼs works,
meaning lies in the details. Icons of American culture, politics, and global capitalism are
symbolically charged surfaces that the artist manipulates through the addition of figures, or,
equally, the erasure of selected elements. In this work, showing the Statue of Liberty, the
artist suddenly zooms in to two male figures—identical twins bearing the artistʼs visage—
embracing in the crown, challenging the viewer to question the complexities that often lie
beneath such iconic, yet often essentializing, symbols.
Jeonʼs sculptural work consists of a mummified body clutching an animated version of an Old
Master painting. A crucified figure of Christ drips blood while lightning bolts flash in the
distance. This immediate encounter with both stagnant and animated human decay, coupled
with the iconography of religious ritual, invites one to confront the relationships between the
mortal, human self and religious faith.
Jeon Joonho was born in 1969 in Busan, South Korea. He graduated in 1997 with a Masters
degree from the Chelsea College of Art & Design in London.
He has participated in several group shows and his first important solo museum show was at
the Pasco Arts Museum in Seoul (2004). The same year he was awarded the Gwangju
Biennial prize. In 2007 he won the Grand Prix of the 27th Biennial of Graphic Art in Ljubljana.
His works are included in public collections of the Contemporary Arts Museum in Houston,
Seoul Museum of Art and the Guggenheim Museum in New York.
For further information regarding the exhibition, please contact Alessandra Bellavita
([email protected]).
To obtain visual elements, please contact Zahra KH-Alam ([email protected]).