Exposure

July 2007

In 2003, the government of South Korea burned over thirty of Mr. Choi’s paintings and drawings, on the charge that they were disquieting and lewd. This shocking act of censorship bears witness to the still-controversial nature of frank depictions of sexual desire, decades after the sexual revolution.

Mr. Choi has long believed that pornography and art need not be mutually exclusive, and that pornographic imagery is an especially apt metaphor for this modern, capitalist world that both sells and censors sexual expression and desire. The rough strokes of paint on canvas belie the deceptively licentious subject matter, and thereby point to the growing disconnect between capitalism’s embrace of sexual imagery as a means of commerce - even when that entails transforming young girls into sexual objects in order to advertise products - and the strain of near-puritanical conservatism professed by many of the very same self-avowed capitalists.

Unlike the work of other artists who blur the boundaries between art and pornography, Mr. Choi’s art seems fixated on female genitalia, typically the only unclothed body part of his subjects. The allure is not romantic or even erotic, but base and bestial. Metaphorically, the arousing young women depicted can stand for our morally bankrupt society: at once desirable and disturbing, these women stir up the basest of desires, lust and the desire to possess – yet they retain power for themselves, by inciting unattainable desire, frustrating all attempts of the observer to possess them.

Kyungtae Choi lives and works in Korea. His work has been seen extensively in South Korea since the early 1980s, and has been the subject of nearly a dozen solo exhibitions in Korea. This is Mr. Choi’s first solo exhibition outside of Korea.

Kyungtae Choi: bio

SOLO EXHIBITIONS

2007 PS35 Gallery, New York

2003 “From 1987 to Red Cherry” Samji Space, Seoul

2001 “High School” (Girl-Pornography2) Boda Gallery, Seoul

2000 “Pornography” Boda Gallery, Seoul

1996 2020 Gallery, Seoul

1993 Keum-Ho Art Gallery, Seoul (Painting, Woodcut)

1992 “Korean Fantasy” Gallery Dole, Seoul

1990 Gallery Dole, Seoul (Painting)

1990 Hansun Gallery, Seoul (Woodcut)

1987 Hangang Art Museum, Seoul


GROUP SHOWS

1996-1999 “Colleagues Exhibition of Realism” 

1986-1988 “Colleagues Exhibition of Human Era” 

1984-1989 “Working Colleagues 1984” 


Show of Young Consciousness

Show of Korean Art‘s Status in the 1980s

Hangang Woodprints Exhibition

Figure Art Festival

Exhibition, “Here Korea

Exhibition of The Youth Today

Exhibition of Messages and Media

Exhibition, Life Today & Art Today

DMZ 93 Exhibition

Memorial Exhibition of Donghak Revolution, “Bird, Bird, Blue Bird!”

Exhibition, “Song for Life”

Exhibition of The Ten People’s Search

3 Men’s Exhibition, “Form of Life”

Exhibition, “10 Years of Hangang Art Museum

Exhibition, “Bitterly Realer Life Than Real Life”

Exhibition of Realism

Exhibition, “Men Facing Death”

Exhibition of Bursting

Exhibition of Independent Art Festival, Ho-Boo-Ho-Hyung

No Cut Exhibition

Exhibition, “Mountains and River of Homeland 2002”

Good Design Festival

Exhibition of Groping 10 Men

Shibuya Exhibition, “Girls Don’t Cry”

Cover Story Exhibition

Exhibition of Joyous Cartoon World, Mobile Museum

Exhibition for Abolishment of National Security Law

Bad Art Show, “Sex is Politics”... etc.

Kyungtae Choi: artwork

untitled (2007)
Oil on Canvas, 31.6" x 39.4"


"J3" (2006)
Oil on Canvas, 35.8" x 45.9