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ART OPENING: John Wynne + Yoonjin Jung The Flux, and I @GazelliArtHouse Thursday 8th May 2014

9th May – 29th June 2014 Gazelli Art House 39 Dover Street London W1 www.gazelliarthouse.com

Continuing to develop the umbrella curatorial theme of 2014 – the only thing constant in life is change – new works by John Wynne and Yoonjin Jung explore one’s inner ‘movement’ in relation to their surrounding. Thus the exhibition forms an outline of the importance of the dimensionality of space and its correlation with the various elements that come into play when considered at any given point in time. Time, as an influencing factor to both the internal and external momentum of ‘happenings’, is at once considered and eventually removed providing an overview of the present in its entirety. On a visual and audible level, one’s awareness of reality is thus stripped and heightened.

John-Wynne-Installation-no.1-for-high-and-low-frequencies-Gazelli-Art-House-at-Rochelle-School
John Wynne Installation no.1 for high and low frequencies Gazelli Art House at Rochelle School

Site-specific installations by John Wynne will present the viewer with a subtly unsettling merge between the external business of our daily urban lives and the apparent refuge of interior space. Inviting sounds from the street into a bespoke composition of pure tones exploring and defining the internal shape of the gallery, his work exploits the sonic permeability of architecture as well as the sculptural potential of sound waves.

‘The space created by Wynne does not display the purity of acoustic phenomena but points to the singular, changing engagement with sound that occurs at different times for different listeners.’

– Daniela Cascela, Frieze.

Yoonjin Jung, Seeing the Unseen, Mixed Media, 100 x 100 cm, 2012
Yoonjin Jung, Seeing the Unseen, Mixed Media, 100 x 100 cm, 2012

?Yoonjin Jung’s new geometric and structured installations, on the contrary, playfully determine the vertical and architectural plains of our physical surroundings. Yet the viewer’s embrace of her interrelation with that which she observes, takes a different dimension due to the inconspicuous nature of the artist’s work. Sculptural installations will also be accompanied by ethereal ink on silk paintings, which stem from the traditional Korean ink paintings.

The show seeks to provide a platform for the audience to detach themselves from the effects of time in order to understand and embrace the inevitable progression of events that we have little or no control over.

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