The Artist © Shin Kiwoun

An “Artist Talk” event was held on the afternoon of the 22nd as part of Shin Kiwoun’s solo exhibition at Art Space Purl in Daegu. Speaking before visitors gathered at the exhibition space, Shin shared insights into his artistic practice and personal trajectory.

Although the exhibition was titled 《Objectify》, the stories he told were closer to the subjective path of his own life.

He opened the conversation by saying, “My childhood playground was my father’s studio, and the paints and correction fluid he used became my toys.”

Shin considers blueprints to be an example of what he calls “honest painting.” To him, technical drawings that reveal the structure of objects without omission, embellishment, or exaggeration represent another form of painting. “I studied painting after entering art school, but I was always more comfortable with technical drafting, which I first learned in middle school technology class. Drawing lines has always felt natural to me.”

The exhibition features structures such as fighter jets, rockets, apartment buildings, and the cartoon character Astro Boy rendered in the form of technical diagrams. Most of the works were produced using 3D printing and then overlaid with white structural lines on ultramarine blue surfaces.

“Blue is the traditional color of blueprints, and in medieval painting ultramarine pigment was the most expensive material. More precious than gold, blue symbolized the highest ideals in both technology and art,” he explained, revealing his deep attachment to the color.

The conversation with the audience continued. In response to the question, “Why do you only draw the front and not the back?” Shin answered, “Because the rear structure is something I still haven’t imagined yet.” Speaking about the future direction of his work, he added, “These days, I find myself more drawn to houses than airplanes.”

Kim Okryeol, director of the Institute of Contemporary Art Studies, commented, “Art is fundamentally a language of concealment, yet in the process of transforming the structural nature of blueprints into painting, Shin Kiwoun questions the boundary between technology and art. His works can be understood as a contemporary artistic attempt to reconsider the very definition of painting.”

An exhibition representative stated, “This exhibition is the result of Shin reconstructing his life and memories through sculptural language. For him, blueprints are no longer merely technical documents. At the point where emotion and structure, memory and material intersect, his ‘honest painting’ continues to unfold.”

The exhibition runs through May 31 at Art Space Purl in Daegu, and admission is free.

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