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Details

  • Title: Chant of Light
  • Creator: Bang, Hai Ja
  • Creator Lifespan: 1937
  • Creator Nationality: Korean
  • Creator Birth Place: Seoul, Korea
  • Date Created: 1999
  • Physical Dimensions: w660 x h470 cm
  • Type: Painting
  • Medium: Natural pigment on geotextile
  • Critic's Note: Bang Hai Ja belongs to the first generation of Korean abstract painters and one of the highly skilled painters in the World. She lives and works in France since 1961. The writer, art historian, and art critic, Pierre Courthion, who did not cease to encourage her, immediately noticed her debut in Paris. It is, in fact, outside her country that Bang Hai Ja really discovered her roots and that she deliberately chose to reference her Korean culture, techniques, and approach to the universe in her work. Between her Korean childhood and her youth in France where she studied Van Gogh, Cezanne, Kandinsky and Paul Klee, she has become determined to cast a link, a binding wire, to “reach deep into myself”, she says, and unite East and West, the calligraphic tradition and the revelation of abstraction. She uses Korean paper made by hand from leaves and plants, according to age-old traditions from Buddhist nuns. It can be rumpled and shaped with the fingers. She also uses unwoven fabric known as geotextile, which she likes for its transparency. Bang Hai Ja, who works with the fabric stretched out flat before her on the floor, paints with it not on it. She repeatedly paints both sides. The colors are set side-by-side and merged to create subtle shades and upon this dreamlike background there arises imaginary or lyrical visions that she also speaks of in her poems. The cellular bursts shot through with a light whose impact on the emotions is a source of happiness. Gilbert Lascault, author of the first monograph of Bang Hai Ja published by the Editions Cercle d’art in 1997, writes: “Bang Hai Ja’s painting constantly offers us new views of the universe. Her painting is primarily a look at the cosmos that admires the universe and helps us to admire its multiple beauties (…) Because of their active immobility and unflagging attention, painters (and poets) are probably in the best position to bear witness to the beauty of the cosmos, its harmony and its diversity. Bang Hai Ja is someone who waits and watches.” In the 2nd monograph 'Breath of light - Bang Hai Ja' of the Editions Cercle d’art published in 2007, the great art critic Pierre Cabanne writes: “Bang Hai Ja’s painting is a shimmering garden, offering its blossom to our mobile gaze. Nothing has weight and nothing lasts. All is profusion and effusion. Another way opens up, a new distance is established with the world and new approaches become possible. We thus come face to face with an art that does not seek to portray and hence to reduce man to enslavement through images, but on the contrary to free him, to restore to him his autonomy, his originality. It is an art that abolishes the humdrum and gives creative power back to the artist and plenitude to the creations. ” French Poet and writer Charles Juliet said; “Her paintings, with their soft and delicate colors, puts us in contact with the best part of ourselves, and also with those inexpressible truths that surround the mystery of life. Her search for what is timeless and imperishable has led her into those states of heightened awareness that have taken her to the furthermost point of herself and have enabled her to fix on her canvases an infinitely subtle weave – the synthesis of all she has lived through, of what she is living through, of what she is reaching for. Her work, deeply rooted in silence, bespeaks asceticism, the long path towards simplicity and to that light which is given to those who are truly fulfilled. ” - 'The spiritual dimension of the work of Bang Hai Ja’. Near to the poets, she illustrated several works with washings: “A Secret Joy“, poems of Charles Juliet, Editions Voix d’encre, 2001, “The Songs of the Transparencies“, poems of Roselyne Sibille, Editions Voix d’encre, “Blossom of Flower “, poems of Kim Chi Ha, Editions Voix d’encre, 2006 and The Moon of Thousand mounts, poems of Korean buddhist monks, Editions Albin Michel, 2003. Many exhibitions were devoted to Bang Hai Ja in France, Korea, Switzerland, Germany, Sweden, Belgium, United States, Japan and Canada. Bang Hai Ja had over 70 personal exhibitions and took part in many collective exhibitions. Pierre Courthion, Gilbert Lascault, Pierre Cabanne, Charles Juliet, Maurice Benamou, Andre Sauge, Olivier Germain-Thomas, Michael Gibson, Valere Bertrand, Patrice de la Perriere and many others wrote on her works. Bang Hai Ja received the ‘Grand Prix, Painter of the Overseas’ on the Day of the painters in Korea, on December 5, 2008 and The Order of Cultural Merit from the Korean Government on October 16, 2010.
  • Artist's Education: Seoul National University, Fine Arts, Painting.Paris, Ecole Superieur des Beaux-Arts, Frescos & stained glass.Paris, Atelier Lacourriere et Frelaut & Atelier 17 de Hayter, Training course of engraving.France Russian Center, Icon

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