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A Major Korean Painter Begins to Get His Due
While postwar Korean artists are celebrated in the West, the strongest painters of the next generation remain under-known.

Lee Seung Jio, “Nucleus F-G-999” (1970), oil on canvas, 63.78 x 63.78 inches (all images courtesy Tina Kim Gallery, New York)

This is a statement that the Korean abstract artist, Lee Seung Jio (1941-1990), made in 1971, a few years after he gained attention in Korea for his cooly geometric abstract paintings of cylindrical forms:

Some call me “Pipe Painter.” I neither welcome nor dislike the distinction. The nickname might be a reference to the illusionistic objecthood created by the repetition without the premise of the motif based on a specific subject. Of course, the pipes are not conjured as a symbol of modern civilization.

The reason I am citing this is because Jio’s paintings, which are being shown in a posthumous New York debut exhibition, Lee Seung Jio: Nucleus at Tina Kim Gallery (February 20–April 4, 2020), are a revelation on a numerous levels.

First, they introduce us to the work of an artist who rejected both Abstract Expressionism and Monochromatic painting — the dominant styles in Korea during the early 1960s — and essentially invented his own hybrid style at a young age, which he continued to explore until his premature death at fifty.

Lee Seung Jio, “Nucleus 77-10” (1977), oil on canvas, 63.39 x 51.18 inches

Second, starting with Kim Whanki (1913-1974) and continuing through Yun Hyong-keun (1928–2007), Kim Tschang-yeul (b. 1929), Park Se Bo (b. 1931), and Lee Ufan (b. 1936), innovative abstract painting was always energetically alive in Korea, even if for many years it was not widely recognized on the world stage, especially in the US. While these five artists have become known and celebrated in the West, the strongest painters of the next generation still remain to a large extent under-known.

The exhibition contains 14 paintings dated between 1968 and 1988, a span of two decades. By including works from different periods, the exhibition makes one thing apparent: despite the strict limits he established for himself, Jio never got stuck. This cannot be said for other abstract artists who gained attention in the 1960s. Older Americans, such as Gene Davis (1920-1985), Jules Olitski (1922-2007), and Kenneth Noland (1924-2010), are good examples of artists who got stuck in a signature style or technique, which was unquestioningly obeisant to painting’s flatness.

Jio undid the tyranny of flatness by introducing gradated tones into his bands, thereby melding two seemingly incommensurable vocabularies: volumetric surfaces with flat ones. His hybrid language suggested a sympathy with Op Art, particularly artists whose motifs consisted of stripes, and with the German artist Konrad Klapheck (b. 1935), who is known for his oversized, hyper-exact, stylized paintings of typewriters, sewing machines, telephones, and other machines.

Lee Seung Jio, “Nucleus 87-99” (1987), oil on canvas; 157.48 x 78.74 inches

Rather than finding the rhythmic repetition of Jio’s forms comforting or reassuring, I was unsettled by their demand to call forth two ways of seeing. It was as if there is no secure place from which to view Jio’s work, and this I feel was deliberate on the artist’s part.

Jio called his paintings “Nucleus” and often numbered them. Together, the gradated bands, which seem be reflecting light off the surface, and the flat, solidly colored bands juxtaposed against them form the “nucleus” or most central, irreducible part of each painting. This suggests that Jio, as influenced as he was by Western postwar painting, which he studied in the painting department of Hongik University, Seoul, Korea, rejected all-over compositions made of similar marks or forms.

The optical effects are unsettling as the paint shifts from gradated bands (or volumetric presences) to flat bands of color, which appear ghostly, as if they are beginning to dissipate along their outer edges, as in “Nucleus 84-49” (1984) and “Nucleus 85-1” (1985).

Lee Seung Jio, “Nucleus 10” (1968), oil on canvas, 51.18 x 51.18 inches

Within such a rigorous composition, slight textural variations in the surface, from hard and flat to viscous and grooved, are captivating. The attentive viewer is apt to end up scrutinizing every inch of the composition, as the differences both underscore and complement the divergent vocabularies that Jio has deftly joined together. More than once I was struck by the grooves left by the brush as it runs evenly and unhesitatingly across a clearly delineated area.

Jio’s painterly control is apparent from a distance but also from close-up. In contrast to many Op artists, as well as painters who were developing an Abstract Illusionist vocabulary, such as Al Held, Jio was not interested in suppressing evidence of the hand. Rather, the virtuosity of his control conveyed a tension between expressiveness and reticence, assertion and discipline.

These irresolvable tensions infuse the paintings with feeling and meaning. I think it would be wrong to consider them apart from the larger background of Korea’s status as a divided, imperiled country, or from the martial law declared by Park Chung Hee, the third President of South Korea, in 1972, which lasted until 1979, when he was assassinated.

Lee Seung Jio, “Nucleus” (1984), oil on canvas, 76.38 x 88.19 inches

Born in 1941, Jio was old enough to remember the Korean War (1950-53), even if he makes no direct reference to it in his work. We should not take this absence as some kind of proof that the conflict and its aftermath had no effect on him, and that all he was interested in was art-for-art’s sake.

Jio’s juxtapositions of flat and illusionistic forms culminate in a visual paradox: the compositions are broken and orderly, smooth and jarring. They can define forms existing in a spatial realm where shadow and light become uncanny. Paint is paint and something more. They might not be “a symbol of modern civilization,” as the artist insists, but I don’t see them as purely abstract paintings either. Their successful resistance to stylistic categories is just one of their abiding strengths.

Far from the Western art world and centers of power, such as New York, Jio made paintings that defined a singular realm where he was the sole inhabitant. Working decisively within the limits suggested by his highly defined vocabulary, he made capacious paintings that invite disproportionate readings without any one side able to claim victory. I call that a major achievement.

Lee Seung Jio: Nucleus continues at Tina Kim Gallery (525 West 21st Street, Chelsea, Manhattan) through April 4.

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