Lee Donggi's Solo Exhibition "Dongi Lee : Pentagon" on View Through, July 17, 2021 at PIBI Gallery - K-ARTNOW
Lee Donggi (b.1967) Seoul, Korea

Lee Donggi graduated from the Department of Painting at Hongik University (1990) and obtained a master’s degree in Painting (1995) from the same graduate school. He is currently (2022) working under an exclusive contract with PIBI Gallery. .

Solo Exhibitions (Brief)

Lee Donggi held his first solo exhibition at Gallery On(Seoul, Korea) in 1993. In the same year, the Japanese animation character ‘Atom’ and the American animation character ‘Mickey Mouse’ were combined to create the character ‘Atomaus’ which captures popular culture and reality.

First announced in the group exhibition 《Remote Control》 held at Boda Gallery (Seoul, Korea) in 1994, Atomaus continues to appear as a main image of the work as a character of Korean pop art through a mixture of art genres and comics.

《Dongi Lee》 Solo Exhibition (2002, Kobayashi Gallery, Tokyo, Japan), 《Smoking》 (2006, One and J Gallery, Seoul, Korea), 《Bubble》 (2008, Willemkers Boom Gallery, Amsterdam, Netherland), 《Dongi Lee: Pentagon》 (2021, PIBI Gallery, Seoul, Korea), etc., and a series of ‘Soap Opera’ series (2012~), in which new characters such as A-Man, Box Robot, and Korean drama scenes were directed in addition to Atomaus showed off since the exhibition 《Double Vision》 held at Gallery 2(Seoul, Korea) in 2008, the abstract painting series has been steadily developing.

Group Exhibitions (Brief)

Participated in group exhibitions held at 《Everyday Life, Memory and History – 2nd Gwangju Biennale 》(1997, Gwangju City Museum, Gwangju, Korea), 《Media City Seoul 2000》(2000, Seoul Museum of Art, Seoul, Korea), 《Animate》(2005, Fukuoka Asian Art Museum, Fukuoka, Japan), 《Lead in Korea II 》(2009, With Space Gallery, Beijing, China), 《Permanded Soul》(2015, Waterfall Mansion, New York, USA), 《DMZ Art & Peace Platform》(2021, Inter-Korean Transit office Unimaru, Paju, Korea)

Awards (Selected)

He was nominated for the 2008 Sovereign Asia Art Prize (Sovereign Art Foundation, China).

Collections (Selected)

His works are in collections of various museums and companies such as the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (Gwacheon, Korea), Seoul Museum of Art (Seoul, Korea), Kumho Museum of Art (Seoul, Korea), Wheelock Property (Hong Kong).

Originality & Identity

Lee Donggi explores the relationship between popular culture and art from the 1990s. Visual and philosophical elements are borrowed from images widely distributed in popular cultures, such as cartoons, dramas, advertisements, the internet, and subcultures, from various sources, including classical artworks, modernist paintings, and abstract art. Based on this, the paintings are completed by dismantling, transforming, mixing, overlapping, and reconstructing the imported images.

Lee Donggi is often called a first-generation Korean pop artist, the artist of Atomaus. It is not an incorrect review, but this title does not cover the various issue he puts into his work. Like Andy Warhol, in the 1960s, Lee Donggi sought to challenge the dichotomy between fine art and popular art from the beginning of the 1990s. And he became the first Korean artist to introduce a cartoon character to the front of fine artwork.

However, due to the graphic components and cartoon characters that stood out in his work, some viewers classified him simply as an ‘illustrator’ or a ‘cartoonist’. The artist ponders the ‘pop’ lacking in Korean contemporary art and completes his own synthesis by referring to the working languages of fine artists such as Andy Warhol, Frank Stella, and Gerhard Richer.

Lee Donggi’s work has now established itself as a significant image and keyword to describe Korean contemporary art, and he said, “I am only interested in ‘my own work’.” The eclectic work that has been going on for the past decade, and was shown in the 2016 exhibition 《Abyss》(Gallery 2, Seoul Korea), and the new work presented in exhibition 《Words》(2018, Gallary 2, Seoul, Korea). He never judges his work and bounds by any name. In this way, he moves forward with his own ‘observing’ and ‘drawing’.

Style & Contents

“I try not to ‘create’. I think my works are not entirely new but have historical images.
Those images will, of course, include works of art.”


The character ‘Atomaus’ and the related series ‘Bubble’ and ‘Smoking’ show his methodology as well. In the artist’s vast world of work, Atomaus continues to reproduce and transform infinitely in the space where he exists, including his facial expression and clothes.

Likewise, the artist Lee Donggi raises the question of ‘originality.’ Further, he critically captures the image of modern people who struggle between the reality of the times in which ideas, information, and language are plentiful and the clash of ‘tension’ and ‘balance’, ‘real’ and ‘fiction’.

Lee Donggi’s work includes various series, such as ‘Comics’(1988~ ), which cuts out a page from a cartoon and draws it into a canvas in enlargement. Moreover, ‘Soap Opera’, is illustrated by capturing scenes from Korean dramas introduced abroad. He is developing a series of various branches, such as the all-over ‘Abstract painting’(2018~ ) with expressionist elements and ‘Eclecticism’, which mixes words and images showing various dualities and abstract patterns. His eclectic art since 2010 deals entirely with hybridity and a mixture of conflict and layering. It becomes the core of his paintings.

This series shows three-dimensional aspects by combining pop culture, easily consumed by subcultures exhibiting its own characteristics, suggests an unreasonable system of meaning, and reveals today’s cultural phenomenon and cross-section of modern society. He is recently expanding the world of his work by introducing ‘Words’, an artwork that cultivates words extracted from literature, art, music, writer’s notes, and the internet and printed materials.

Constancy & Continuity

The 1990s, when Lee Donggi started his artwork, was a period of cultural change in Korea. Public art was at the ebb, and postmodern discourse was ignited. A new interest in new media art began to rise.

Lee Donggi’s work, contemplating ‘pop’ after his debut, received attention during this trend. However, it was still regarded as an unfamiliar form in Korean art. Against this rejecting movement in Korea, the Japanese pop led by Takashi Murakami was sweeping the world.

In Korea, pop art and artists began to get full attention in the 2000s. As a result, the perspective of understanding pop art as a self (critical) confession of visual culture that exists in life and daily life has been established. It has spread to various fields such as movies and music. Lee Donggi was an artist at the centre of this trend in the Korean art world. The artworks of Lee Donggi, Kyoung Tack Hong, and Dong-Yu KIM were actively traded in overseas art auctions, and a pop-art boom started in Korea.

Lee Donggi is expanding his scope of activities with works with unique affinity and charm that neither popular culture nor fine art has. It seems that pop expands its reach within the public in a way previous art movements did not have.

Since participating in the exhibition 《Sonnenschein》(Karl-Stroble Gallery), held in Vienna, Austria, in 1991, the artist has steadily shown his artworks through galleries and art fairs in East Asia, America, and Europe, giving him an international reputation. Meanwhile, he creates a single album cover for J-hope (2021), a member of BTS, receiving wider public attention. Additionally, he collaborates with large companies to release art products.

His artwork world is no longer confined to ‘pop’ and presents new implications for Korean painting inside and outside his works.

Lee Donggi's Solo Exhibition "Dongi Lee : Pentagon" on View Through, July 17, 2021 at PIBI Gallery
PIBI Gallery

PIBI GALLERY presents PENTAGON, the solo exhibition of Dongi Lee from May 27th to July 17th. This is the artist’s third show with PIBI, preceded by the first in 2018, Dongi Lee: 2015 – 2018, and the 2019 Dongi Lee, 1993 - 2014: Back to the Future.
 
Lee’s works can be broadly divided into six series, of which this exhibition has been curated focusing on his eclecticism series that reveal cultural phenomena and aspects of modern society of today through the methods of colliding and overlapping. The exhibition will introduce Pentagon, a gigantic painting of ten meters long and 2.4 meters high, along with other new paintings, as well as take a closer look at his major eclecticism works. Furthermore, a new book that talks about Lee’s eclecticism series is due to be released with the show, following DONGI LEE, Conversation with Art Critic Ryu Byeonghak that was published in 2019 by PIBI GALLERY.

Installation view of "Pentagon" at PIBI Gallery, 2021.ⓒ Lee Donggi / PIBI GALLERY

Lee Dongi is the first generation of artists who applied images of cartoons to Korean contemporary art. He began in the early 1990s, a time when the Korean art scene witnessed experimentation of art formats and dramatic changes to the medium environment, with paintings of Atomaus, a character he created in 1993 by combing images of the Japanese Astro Boy and the American Mickey Mouse. Coming into the 2000s when mass media and consumerism was growing at a rapid pace, he continued his artistic path creating original sub-characters such as Mictom, Nero, Doggy Dog, A-Man, Box Robot, and Dr. Froid, etc.

Installation view of "Pentagon" at PIBI Gallery, 2021.ⓒ Lee Donggi / PIBI GALLERY

Lee’s works can be viewed under six broad categories: Eclecticism, a mixture of subculture-infused elements – consisting of words and images taken from the internet, newspaper, magazines, etc. – both familiar and strange that suggest diverse double meanings; the character Atomaus, that has become segmented and transformed through an obsessive self-emulation; Double vision, in which  an Abstract painting and Atomaus are both expressed on a single canvas divided into two; Abstract painting, filled with expressionism elements; Soap opera, which transfer into drawings captured scenes from Korean dramas aired overseas; and Comics, drawings of a specific zoomed-in part of a comic book page.
 
Though Lee’s paintings adopt and edit images that visually represent the perceived contemporary world, they do not hold in them a specific narrative, and no relational understanding exists between each of the elements present. The inundation of visual images from the multi-media and digital mediums of today and stimulations from society become layered or juxtaposed meaninglessly with the landscape of everyday life. Among Lee’s works, those that best represent such qualities are the layered paintings in his eclecticism series. “Layered” here is defined as images of different nature being overlapped and accumulated on the same screen, a method that the artist has used to consistently build the series since 2010. Through the combining of mass consumer culture and subculture to give a multi-dimensional interpretation, the eclecticism series uses colliding and overlapping as a way to reveal the cultural phenomena and the cross-section of modern society of today.

Lee was always specially drawn to readily consumed and widely distributed images within popular culture, and blatantly used such mundane forms of modern society to outwardly show his artwork is based on it. But rather than simply bringing visual images of pop culture into the realm of art indiscriminately, he uses them in his attempts to address the influence and effects popular cultures has on society and contemplate how to interlink the many contact points of arts and visual culture.

Installation view of "Pentagon" at PIBI Gallery, 2021.ⓒ Lee Donggi / PIBI GALLERY

Lee’s first exhibition with PIBI GALLERY in 2018 was centered on eclecticism and abstract paintings, two bodies of work of the artist that were prominent during a certain time period. His second show, Dongi Lee: Back to the Future, was about revisiting his early works that led to the birth of Korean pop art in the early 1990s, a period when the Korean art scene witnessed experimentation of art formats and dramatic changes to the medium environment, going over the attitude and methods that form the basis of his works. Going through his work from in and around 1993 to 2014, the show attempted to look over the Korean contemporary art environment that brought about its version of pop art and gauge the status and role of Korea’s first generation pop artist.

Installation view of "Pentagon" at PIBI Gallery, 2021.ⓒ Lee Donggi / PIBI GALLERY

PIBI GALLERY intends a much more in-depth inspection of Lee’s artistic world for his third exhibition PENTAGON, focusing, among his many series, on eclecticism in terms of its importance and many complex layers. The paintings of this series have Lee’s diverse characters and vast amount of collected resource images coming together in unorganized tangles to present a screen that seems severed but humorous at the same time, offering a multi-angle viewpoint that seeks out the past, present, and future. PENTAGON hence will be a meaningful opportunity to observe and understand such characters and their variations with a much more in-depth way than one would have otherwise.

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