CODY CHOI.KUKJE GALLERY While there's nothing new in talk of art m the computer age, or of the influence of digital imagery on visual perception and the artistic imagination, Cody Choi's exhibition "New Pictorialism--Database Painting" merits attention because of the artist's eloquent el·o·quent adj. 1. Characterized by persuasive, powerful discourse: an eloquent speaker; an eloquent sermon. 2. way of personalizing these themes. The exhibition consists of three parts: twenty-one "paintings" (actually vutek prints on mesh, backed with canvas); a desktop computer with an interactive software program; and a text stenciled along the gallery walls, narrating the story line behind the paintings, the personal experience from which the project derives. Choi's previous work has been consistently intelligent-meditations on art history layered with his personal experience as a sociology student in Korea, then as an art student in California encountering Western art, and finally as a Korean artist continuing to live and work in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. . In his 1996 show in Seoul he used Pepto Bismol mixed with toilet paper as a sculptural material to produce full-size versions of several icons from Western sculpture, including Rodin's Thinker. The antacid antacid, any one of several basic substances that counteract stomach acidity (see stomach). Antacids are used by physicians to treat hyperchlorhydria, i.e., the excessive production of hydrochloric acid by the parietal cells lining the stomach. had become a favorite material of the artist's after two and a half years of consumprion-- a bottle every day, to relieve the constant abdominal distress caused by the anxiety of expatriate Expatriate An employee who is a U.S. citizen living and working in a foreign country. life. The bulk of "New Pictorialism" consists of conventionally formatted canvases, but printed with high-resolution images of animals in dense junglelike settings, which Choi made using the coloring program on his son's computer and then revised using more sophisticated systems. With their dazzling video-arcade palette, the lush backgrounds imply a spatial setting of some depth, but the order of things in the paintings does not mimic the natural order that we inhabit in·hab·it v. in·hab·it·ed, in·hab·it·ing, in·hab·its v.tr. 1. To live or reside in. 2. To be present in; fill: Old childhood memories inhabit the attic. , as did conventional mechanical reproductions such as film, photography, or video. Rather the paintings are the outcome of what the artist calls a "new pictorialism": Originating in clip art A set of canned images used to illustrate word processing and desktop publishing documents. culled from database files, it is imagery that has been found, edited, and synthesized syn·the·sized adj. 1. Relating to or being an instrument whose sound is modified or augmented by a synthesizer. 2. Relating to or being compositions or a composition performed on synthesizers or synthesized instruments. . The paintings are material evidence of the story line presented in the wall text, which recounts an experience involving the artist and his son. Choi recalls how, as a child in kindergarten kindergarten [Ger.,=garden of children], system of preschool education. Friedrich Froebel designed (1837) the kindergarten to provide an educational situation less formal than that of the elementary school but one in which children's creative play instincts would be , he was taught to use a pencil for writing and drawing. His son, at the same age, learned how to use a computer: After he came back home [from a day at the zoo], he told me he wanted to draw a tiger. Then he went to his computer desk to find a tiger figure from his magic 3-D pre-schooler printing software. He made a very successful tiger painting and printed it out.... I was surprised at computer. It is a thinking tool, gives my son pre-given database and hyper A Greek work meaning "above" or "more than." It is used as a prefix to technical concepts and products to convey a more advanced or more automatic capability. electronic digital imagination. It became a new idea of imagination, instead of my son's imagination out of what he saw." The narrative is dearly and simply stated, thought-provoking, and nuanced with a Korean accent. The text conveys the artist's particular manner of speaking English: Choi communicates well after many years in the United States, but English is not his native language. His expansive meditations on such grand themes as new models of creative processes and the frontiers of globalizing technology and of the artistic imagination are contained by his idiosyncratic id·i·o·syn·cra·sy n. pl. id·i·o·syn·cra·sies 1. A structural or behavioral characteristic peculiar to an individual or group. 2. A physiological or temperamental peculiarity. 3. manner of speech. Language remains the most difficult barrier to overcome, binding the individual to a place of origin and distancing him from the place to which he's migrated. |
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