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	<title>Galleries in Paris &#187; Lee Bae</title>
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		<title>LEE BAE &#8211; PERROTIN</title>
		<link>http://www.galleriesinparis.com/exhibitions/lee-bae-perrotin/</link>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 04 Jan 2022 16:25:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Galleries</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Exhibitions]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[6 impasse saint Claude – 75003 Paris]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[76 rue de Turenne – 75003 Paris]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Lee Bae]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[PERROTIN]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[BLACK IN CONSTELLATION January 8 — February 26, 2022 For this second exhibition at the Perrotin gallery in Paris and the fifthin [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BLACK IN CONSTELLATION</p>
<p><br role="presentation" />January 8 — February 26, 2022</p>
<p><br role="presentation" />For this second exhibition at the Perrotin gallery in Paris and the fifth<br role="presentation" />in this same gallery on the international scene, Lee Bae has chosen<br role="presentation" />to show five series of works as well as a large installation, all<br role="presentation" />recounting his last twenty years of work.</p>
<p><br role="presentation" />We find the series Issu du feu, with its famous paintings made with pieces<br role="presentation" />of charcoal; Landscape, defined by these large abstract landscapes radi-<br role="presentation" />cally separated into two spaces, one white, the other black; Untitled,<br role="presentation" />composed of canvases designed with charcoal ink and acrylic medium.<br role="presentation" />And we discover two new series, never before shown in France: the first,<br role="presentation" />Brushstroke, composed of large-scale papers from which emerge shapes<br role="presentation" />painted in charcoal ink; and the second, Issu du feu (White lines), cha-<br role="presentation" />racterized by pieces of charcoal on canvas topped with small white lines.</p>
<p><br role="presentation" />The ensemble reminds and highlights that—whatever the medium, the<br role="presentation" />techniques, the disciplines—Lee Bae’s work, since its beginnings in<br role="presentation" />1990, affirms the same purpose: the quest for black. Black in all its states,<br role="presentation" />in all its forms, in all its lights, in all its depths and even sometimes in its<br role="presentation" />reflections.</p>
<p><br role="presentation" />In Issu du feu, black—the blacks, we should say, as Lee Bae represents<br role="presentation" />their range from deep black to almost light gray—evoked by the multiple<br role="presentation" />pieces of charcoal that the artist juxtaposes and sticks together, reveals<br role="presentation" />itself under multiple facets: he plays with its shine, with it iridescent<br role="presentation" />effects, with its pearly aspects born from the impression of movements<br role="presentation" />on the surface.</p>
<p><br role="presentation" />In Untitled it is the opposite: black is shown in its depths, born from the<br role="presentation" />density of the charcoal ink used to draw shapes and heightened by the<br role="presentation" />contrast with the white surfaces that define their outlines. Like a black<br role="presentation" />hole, the tones of black pull the eye into endless perspectives – a call that<br role="presentation" />we also feel with the Landscape series, whose radical geometric compo-<br role="presentation" />sitions, sometimes like cliff edges, create an echo between black and<br role="presentation" />white to further intensify their juxtaposition.</p>
<p><br role="presentation" />In his recent large works on paper, Lee Bae puts movement in his blacks<br role="presentation" />and deploys the gradations of their transparency. Contrary to the Untitled<br role="presentation" />series where each shape is meticulously drawn several times superim-<br role="presentation" />posed, in Brushstroke, each shape or symbol drawn in charcoal ink is the<br role="presentation" />result of a single gesture, without possibility of remorse and of an abso-<br role="presentation" />lute brilliance that combines both mental concentration and corporeal<br role="presentation" />control. Close to calligraphy, this writing, which in its way relates to a tra-<br role="presentation" />ditional method, testifies at the same time to a highly contemporary spirit<br role="presentation" />and an immanent touch and presence.</p>
<p><br role="presentation" />For Issu du feu (White lines), Lee Bae resumes his compositions with<br role="presentation" />pieces of charcoal, but he forms a pattern and punctuates them on the<br role="presentation" />surface with small lines in white oil pastel, like commas on a blackboard.<br role="presentation" />In this way, he puts black in the background and gives it even more pers-<br role="presentation" />pective.</p>
<p><br role="presentation" />Finally, in his installations, always made with burnt wood or charcoal, Lee<br role="presentation" />Bae puts black in relief. He puts it in a ball, in a bundle, or in a point to<br role="presentation" />show that black can also be perceived as modeled, as protuberance. And<br role="presentation" />that whatever its aspect, this color with its innumerable nuances allows<br role="presentation" />him to speak about time, space, energy, body, soul. And thus, about life.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Henri-François Debailleux<br role="presentation" />December 2021</p>
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