YOUNG JOO LEE

YOUNG JOO LEEMINE

June 21 - July 21, 2018
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA

Ochi Projects is pleased to present Mine, Young Joo Lee’s first solo exhibition with the gallery. The exhibition is on view from June 23 through July 21 with an opening reception June 23, 5-8pm.

Young Joo Lee combines inspiration from her dreams with personal and political histories to create drawings, sculptures and films. On view in the downstairs gallery, Paradise Limited is a three-channel animation based on Lee’s year-long project about the nature sanctuary at the Korean Demilitarized Zone (DMZ). Lee documented her research as a 25-meter scroll drawing, a reference to traditional Korean landscape painting, and created a sculptural scroll display to house the work, which provided the background for the film. Combining her research, dreams and interviews, Paradise Limited explores history, war, and the function of drawing as a medium that creates memory of and in the body.

In the upstairs gallery is Song from Sushi, an animated music video, written from the point of view of a sushi woman served on a sushi conveyor belt. She sings about the stereotypical depiction of Asian women as exotic sexual objects in media and cultural representations.

Additional works on paper and “performing” sculptures on view throughout the space provide context that, along with the films, take a viewer on an imagined journey. Lee’s work is a glimpse into how our environments are not only outside of us, but how they truly alter our perception and inform our personal identities.

Young Joo Lee (b. Seoul, Korea) lives and works in Los Angeles. She earned a BFA in painting from Hongik Arts University, Korea, a Meisterschuelerin in Film from Städelschule, Frankfurt Germany, and a MFA in Sculpture from Yale University. She has exhibited her work nationally and internationally.

Paradise Limited, 2017 by Young Joo Lee, 17 minutes 3-channel loop animation video Edition of 3 + 1 APInstallation image of Young Joo Lee, Mine at Ochi Projects, Los AngelesSong From Sushi, 2016 by Young Joo Lee, 4 minutes and 47 seconds Digital animation music video Edition of 3 + 1 APTrees in Paradise, 2017 by Young Joo Lee, Oil clay, aluminum, epoxy 11.5 x 10 x 11 inchesTrees in Paradise, 2017 by Young Joo Lee, Oil clay, aluminum, epoxy 13 x 10 x 9 inchesTrees in Paradise, 2017 by Young Joo Lee, Oil clay, aluminum, epoxy 10.5 x 8 x 5 inchesMelting Point, 2018 by Young Joo Lee, Chocolate, steel, aluminum, resin 40 x 46 x 24 inchesIn Search of the Lost Tiger (Paradise Limited), 2016 by Young Joo Lee, Korean ink on scroll paper 12.6 x 984 inchesIn Search of the Lost Tiger (Paradise Limited), 2016 by Young Joo Lee, Korean ink on scroll paper 12.6 x 984 inchesDisgraceful Blue, 2016 by Young Joo Lee, Watercolor on paper 15 x 11 inchesFacescape, 2017 by Young Joo Lee, Charcoal on paper 9 x 12 inchesFather’s Tree, 2017 by Young Joo Lee, Watercolor on paper 12 x 9 inchesFibrous Thoughts, 2017 by Young Joo Lee, Watercolor on paper 9 x 12 inchesHair Tsunami, 2016 by Young Joo Lee, Watercolor on paper 9 x 12 inchesListener, 2017 by Young Joo Lee, Watercolor on paper 12 x 9 inchesMaster Yogi, 2016 by Young Joo Lee, Acrylic on paper 12 x 9 inchesSister Yogi, 2016 by Young Joo Lee, Acrylic on paper 12 x 9 inchesSushi Woman, 2016 by Young Joo Lee, Watercolor on paper 9 x 12 inchesTelepathy, 2016 by Young Joo Lee, Watercolor on paper 12 x 9 inchesTreeHuman, 2017 by Young Joo Lee, Charcoal on paper 12 x 9 inchesVirtual Intimacy, 2017 by Young Joo Lee, Watercolor on paper 9 x 12 inchesBig Appetite, 2018 by Young Joo Lee, Acrylic on paper 9 x 12 inches3 Pairs of Eyes, 2017 by Young Joo Lee, Pencil and ink on paper 9 x 12 inchesChoir, 2016 by Young Joo Lee, Watercolor on paper 9 x 12 inchesInformation Leak, 2018 by Young Joo Lee, Watercolor on paper 9 x 12 inches

Press

  • Young Joo Lee
    ArtForum
    By Andy Campbell
    October 2018
    LINK

  • Young Joo Lee
    PICK OF THE WEEK: Jody Zellen: Young Joo Lee: Mine
    July 23, 2018
    LINK

  • Young Joo Lee
    LOS ANGELES TIMES: At the Korean DMZ
    reunification through one artist’s strange lens
    July 7, 2018
    LINK