The Invited Country Exhibition

The invited exhibition of Cheongju Craft Biennale 2019 introducing worldwide craft trends through a total of four exhibitions of Denmark, Hungary, China and 10 countries of ASEAN

By Cheongju Craft Biennale

Cheongju Craft Biennale

Invited Country ExhibitionCheongju Craft Biennale

Honorary ambassador actor Ji Jin Hee's explain
00:00

In the invited country exhibition, traditional and modern craft from 13 countries, including Denmark, China, Hungary, and 10 ASEAN countries are on display.

The first country is Denmark. This year marks the 60th anniversary of diplomatic relations between Denmark and Korea. Under the theme of "Crafted Matter," you can see how Danish artists explore modern crafts. Also, you can sit on the works of pipes and sofas to experience them first hand.

Passing through the Danish pavilion, you can see the Chinese pavilion. Including two of the four greatest Chinese artists of modern art, Fang Li-jun and WieMin-jun, you will be able to see new works of crafts of 16 artists which have expanded into modern art.

The Hungarian pavilion is called “The Next Hand”. From students to artisans, you can see the works created by different generations. Feel the essence of Hungarian crafts from metal, glass, ceramics as well as textile crafts.

Under the theme of "ASEAN Craft: Tradition and Evolution," the ASEAN pavilion presents a variety of crafts from 10 countries. To celebrate the 30th anniversary of the establishment of Korea-ASEAN dialogue, the exhibition presents a meaningful moment to ASEAN's unique culture.

Denmark ExhibitionCheongju Craft Biennale

Denmark exhibition

At a time when design as a concept is applied broadly to many different phenomena by many different actors, it is important not to lose sight of the essence of craft and design: hands-on work with the material and with the visual, aesthetic and sensuous qualities of an object.Thus, for the Cheongju International Craft Biennale 2019,  we have selected 15 works that highlight the manual engagement with a wide range of materials and bring out new material properties. The exhibition highlights the experimental and uncompromising quality of design and crafts, which is constantly engaged in exploring new ways of working with a material. Qualities that we need to preserve and nurture.The selected designers and makers represent a wide field within Danish crafts and design, including both new and established practitioners. A common factor uniting them all is a unique and experimental approach to their field. They push their materials to the limit and challenge the boundaries of the possible, creating an exhibition that is rich in details and sensuous qualities.With the exhibition we offer a snapshot of sensuous material qualities. Qualities that may seem elusive and hard to define, but which are immediately clear when we experience them first-hand.

Iben Høj Iben HøjCheongju Craft Biennale

The yarn is made of up to seven different strands, which makes it possible to gradually change the colour of individual threads to achieve the desired shimmering effect in a process that Høj describes as 'painting with fibres’. The finished work incorporates more than 50 different fibres. Materials Threads and yarn made of viscose, polyamide, polyester, monofil and other fibres Dimensions.

Cecilie Bendixen Cecilie BendixenCheongju Craft Biennale

Sound-absorbing element constructed as an open weave on a plywood ring, glued together of six laser-cut segments. The outside of the ring has 720 laser-cut slits to hold the thread. Suspended from a pivot joint, the ring is wound around with thread in thousands of high-precision movements. The weave takes about two weeks to complete. It has to be tight enough to produce a regular pattern and loose enough not to warp the ring.

Isabel Berglund Isabel BerglundCheongju Craft Biennale

Dissolved into the fabric
00:00

The waxed cotton string contains a subtle reference to the many candles burning in the church, and the form expression of the sculpture echoes the pillars and arches framing the cloister as well as the life that has unfolded here, with added references to bird wings and nun’s veils. Materials Waxed cotton string, metal Dimensions.

Kevin Hviid Kevin HviidCheongju Craft Biennale

Billy
00:00

Round bench with seating for two persons on both sides. First, the basic elements are built in wood. Next, the steel profiles are put in place, guided by hand-built wooden templates, and TIG-welded. Due to the large scale and the use of the many circle sections, the piece was first constructed as a wooden model in order to test angles, directions and dimensions. The form inspiration for the bench came from the cactus.

Louise Campbell Louise CampbellCheongju Craft Biennale

Hand-lino-printed paper, hand-cut, hand-folded and assembled
by hand.

Rasmus Fenhann Rasmus FenhannCheongju Craft Biennale

A wide bench made of pieces of solid Oregon pine glued together. The three-dimensional pattern on the surface was created with a CNC milling machine and subsequently hand-finished with Japanese planers and profiled scrapers. The legs are made of two wedge-shaped pieces of Oregon Pine, joined with sliding dovetails in European walnut. Finally, the surface was sanded and finished with lye soap.

Petra Dalström Petra DalströmCheongju Craft Biennale

White hand-moulded, high-fired porcelain sheets that have been held over a flame from a candle. The flame creates black stripes of soot on the surface of the porcelain. The sheets are placed on a wooden board that has been blackened by a torch.

China ExhibitionCheongju Craft Biennale

China exhibition

"Common art, common art, public art." This theme of various meanings includes movements, gestures, and processes. The works all contain those phenomena, and as they exist in space, they embody technology, visual action, and innovation.

Yue Min jun Yue Min junCheongju Craft Biennale

Hysterically funny
00:00

On the surface, the characters in the work are cracking with exaggerated gestures and mouth shapes, but Wie tried to express through that smile the confusion, emptiness, anger and sadness caused by China's cultural revolution, reform and opening.

Fang Li Jun Fang Li JunCheongju Craft Biennale

2016
00:00

The great breadth of space, the strong contrast of small figures, and the landscape of space have more than the usual size, but the large space shows the small scale of space and the humbleness of small figures, so it shows the fragility of people and life. He sometimes has an obsession with nihilism, sometimes deliberately expresses nihileness, and would never be so delicate without superb control, delicacy and patience. In his ideology that emphasizes the equality of men and women, they will disappear without a trace, with a single piece of leaves as big as a grain of sand.However, Pang Li-jun captured a vivid moment and completed his artistic imagination.

Zhang Hong Bo Zhang Hong BoCheongju Craft Biennale

The human world in my sky
00:00

The author imagined the 'the human world' because the human world in the sky, " author of the arithmetic. We sometimes go a long way to see, such as water and mountains, rocks, trees. Real space sometimes people caught in trees and mountains, rocks, such as in water. This work is the writer's best teams in the eyes and hearts to express that nature is 'The human world in the sky'. 'human spheres' a recreated the nature of the real anxiety and anxiety, nostalgia and sentiment that can't help, not with police officers. Traditional landscape and nature in the author's thoughts and reproduce.

Tong Zhen Gang Tong Zhen GangCheongju Craft Biennale

Tree
00:00

Psychology and spells require the mental aspect and the training the soul unfolds, the body and shell must grind and record even the smallest parts of life, and the soul is constantly corrupted in addition.

Liu Shui Yang Liu Shui YangCheongju Craft Biennale

Circle of bones
00:00

Liu Shui Yang's work transformed this endoskeleton into a mechanical form structure with a special meaning, using these social taboos to reinforce potential social conflict, collective, social and psychological stress, and individual, psychological and cohesiveness. The structure of the work itself explains the important role of social power in formal symbols and metaphorical meaning.

Cui Yu Cui YuCheongju Craft Biennale

Horse
00:00

When the artist traveled to Inner Mongolia, he was inspired by the culture he met there. In Inner Mongolia's culture, horses are more than family rides. The artist, who recognized words like a person, tried to portray the human side of expressing emotion in the work you see. You can find human feelings in elements such as facial expressions, manes, and tails.

Hungary ExhibitionCheongju Craft Biennale

Hungary exhibition

“Hands that Bond” mean hands that connect the old and young generations and the past, the present, and the future as well as hands that create crafts.

Skating on Midsummers'Eve by Zsuzsa PereliCheongju Craft Biennale

Skating on Midsummers’ Eve
00:00

On the artwork Skating on Midsummers’ Eve (2003) by Zsuzsa Péreli appear two figures whose steps are in perfect harmony, as an emblematic representation of a relationship in perfect harmony. Based on the author’s comment, she saw a couple on an old photography, removed them as a motive from the original environment to attribute them a personal meaning. [...] The colourful world and the use of materialsin the carpets of Péreli are versatile and extremely rich. The wool is oftenmixed with silk providing a special light to certain points of the material, orshe contrasts it with chenille composing colours, faithful to the greattraditions of weaving, from a lot of different shades. All artworks are weavedby her own hands.

Sign from the sky by Éva PenkalaCheongju Craft Biennale

Sign from the sky
00:00

[...] The purple color represents repentance. The complementary color yellow represents the unreachable and unapproachable gold color that is symbolic of the celestial world. The color blue is the color of wisdom and the color of the mantle of Mother Mary’s, who is considered to be Hungary’s protector. Green represents hope and the rebirth of nature, while white represents purity and light. The artist originally used weaving techniques to create her pieces but, due to health complications, had no choice but to find another method. As a result, she now uses computer technology and transfers printing to create tapestries, sew, staple, and weave digitally to create her crafts.

Glory…II by Katalin KatonaCheongju Craft Biennale

Glory…II
00:00

This piece is Katalin Katona’s Glory...I, a series of works that emphasizes the symbolism of obelisks, pillars, doors, and wings. Obelisks have been used for around 2000 years as the everlasting linkage between earth and the heavens. Here, the artist combines vertically oriented obelisks and horizontally oriented doors to connect the sacred qualities of heaven and earth. Also, wings are combined with the obelisks to represent the never-ending phenomenon that is time. Through this piece, the artist uses physical depictions and theoretical approaches in order to combine abstract concepts.

Geza Laczak Geza LaczakCheongju Craft Biennale

Mr. Géza Laczák has been experimenting for more than a decade with metal crumpling the essence of which is that heoverheats the metal plates supported by different shapes and as a result of the heat theybecome fixed in various forms, smooth or crumpled, thus changing the occasionalartistic damages of the material into aesthetic element. Developing and thenchanging scale, he represents this technique applied at the beginning on articlesfor personal use or ornaments also on the above-mentioned place-sculptures.Theblocks of artistic surface placed deliberately ensure playful plastic-artvariety to his works forming a sophisticated contrast with the rigidgeometrical frame structure.

Pendant of St Eligius by Lajos MuharosCheongju Craft Biennale

Pendant of St Eligius
00:00

The artist is a renowned silverworker in Hungary, and his work is celebrated by collectors in Germany, Italy, the United States of America, the Netherlands, Israel, and other countries around the world. He decorates chalices and goblets with gemstones and most commonly uses motifs depicting images of heroes, kings, and princes and other famous figures from Transylvania’s history. Currently, Hungary’s gold and silver craftsmanship technology is on the decline. [...] The artist emphasizes the reality of how Hungary is gradually changing, losing its identity as a society that understands the arts and receives inspiration from it.

Masterpiece selection by Júlia NémaCheongju Craft Biennale

"Ceramic artist Julia Nema is presenting plate and bowl selections from her unique tableware collections. These were designed and hand made for various restaurants and chefs to serve food. In addition, her cups and bowls help people focus on the enjoyment of tea. All porcelain and stoneware pieces of Ms Nema are thrown on a pottery wheel or hand formed, and finally finished in her wood-fired kiln at a very high temperature, at about 1320 °C. Glazes and colours are developed by the artist, sourcing local materials from Hungary. Ever since Julia Nema encountered wood firing, she has been inspired to harmonize its spontaneity and primordial power with her constructivist aesthetics and her love for fundamental geometric and organic forms. She retains a back-to-basics approach in everything she creates. Her quiet, silent and poetic objects leave free space to fulfill for nature and users as well."

ASEAN ExhibitionCheongju Craft Biennale

ASEAN exhibition

Revisiting the value of crafts containing the identity of ASEAN 10 countries and presenting the beauty and sensitivity of each country's culture through crafts that have evolved based on social and cultural backgrounds in history.

Introducing the crafts from 10 ASEAN countries, which are a harmonious blend of beauty and liquor, explore the possibilities of crafts in each country as cultural contents.

Cheongju Craft Biennale introduces the distinctive beauty of ASEAN culture through traditional crafts reflecting each country's unique materials, techniques, or spirits, and modernly reinterpreted crafts, designs or arts.

Vipoo Srivilasa (Thailand) Vipoo Srivilasa (Thailand)Cheongju Craft Biennale

We come in peace
00:00

This piece is entitled "We come in peace III" by Vipoo Srivilasa. Born in Thailand and now working in Australia, Vipoo Srivilasa creates ceramic sculptures that perfectly harmonize his two cultural identities. [...] The artist's pieces at the ASEAN Craft Exhibition include Patience Flower and Happy Together. The Patience Flower series is inspired by the snowball blossom kettle from Meissen, Germany, dating back to the 18th century, created by attaching a myriad of small units to the surface.

Phi Phi Oanh (Vietnam) Phi Phi Oanh (Vietnam)Cheongju Craft Biennale

The great wall
00:00

The great wall expresses the ownership that the brick wall symbolizes and the boundaries defined by it. In particular, these boundaries are linked to the possession of natural resources or human desires and draw a call for economic and environmental issues in this era. Traditional lacquer techniques go through a process called material transformation. This technique embodies tactile features such as the rigidity, weight, and mass of the image to be displayed.

Sothea Thang (Cambodia) Sothea Thang (Cambodia)Cheongju Craft Biennale

Devata XIX
00:00

We will showcase the 'Debata' series, which reveals the various trappings of the human body by mixing various metal materials. It is derived from the Hindu term "god." The word "god" in Khmer specifically refers to the god of women, or angels. Visualization expands the realm of deified emotions by sculptural highlighting the signs of peace and inherent power. The images are made of burlap, iron, and steel, trying to change their shape to empower them with a great sense of divine energy. It seems to exist as a “god,” helping to escape the dark past and defend its own traditions and peace.

Hans Tan (Singapore) Hans Tan (Singapore)Cheongju Craft Biennale

Outside in No.2
00:00

"His ceramics stand out with the new technique devised by the artist. You can read the unprecedented transformations and disciplines found in Singapore's history in how you can create your own unique patterns using masking and sandblasting techniques on colored ceramics."

Mayang 1, 2018 by Anne Samat (Malaysia)Cheongju Craft Biennale

Mayang 1
00:00

The author's ancestor about the ancient tale, inspired by glamorous and sophisticated created a totem. In addition, the author's pedigree as a family and have reminded us of the diversity of Malaysia's rich culture.

Gregoria chair natural by Ito Kish(Philippines)Cheongju Craft Biennale

Gregoria chair natural
00:00

[...] The Gregorian chair, which will be presented at this exhibition, is an iconic design and piece of art which represents Ito Kish. Decorative pillars of different heights and diameters support the backs of semi-circular rattan sheets. All of the materials used in Gregorian chairs are procured through sustainable materials and production means. The gemma tree, also used as a material, is a fast-growing, hard wood that is cultivated and supplied locally. As such, the success of the products is driving the growth of the community. Now, the chair is not merely a product loved by people all over the world, but also a classic design by Ito Kish.

Credits: Story

Denmark: Iben Høj, Cecilie Bendixen, Isabel Berglund, Kevin Hviid, Louise Campbell, Rasmus Fenhann, Petra Dalström

China: Yue Min jun, Fang Li Jun, Li Yu Duan, Zhang Hong Bo, Tong Zhen Gang, Liu Shui Yang, Cui Yu

Hungary: Zsuzsa Pereli, Katalin Katona, Geza Laczak, Lajos Muharos, Júlia Néma, Éva Penkala

ASEAN: Vipoo Srivilasa (Thailand), Phi Phi Oanh (Vietnam), Sothea Thang (Cambodia), Hans tan (Singapore), Anne Samat
(Malaysia), Ito Kish (Philippines)

Credits: All media
The story featured may in some cases have been created by an independent third party and may not always represent the views of the institutions, listed below, who have supplied the content.
Home
Discover
Play
Nearby
Favorites