Bae Bien-U, Sacred Wood
Bae, Bien-U
Sacred Wood
Hatje Cantz, 2009, signed
Bae, Bien-U
Texts by Wonkyung Byun, Thomas Wagner
Hatje Cantz, 2009. English, 120 pp., 71 ills., 12 in color
35.70 x 29.20 cm
hardcover, in slipcase
ISBN 978-3-7757-2283-4
"For the Korean people, pines are foundations for their soul." (Bae, Bien-U)
Bae, Bien-U (*1950 in Yeosu) is regarded as one of Korea’s most important artists, a photographer who has influenced generations of students through his many years as a teacher. He became known in his native country for his meditative landscape photographs, which have an almost calligraphic quality. His most popular works to date are photographs of the famous pine forests near the shrine of the kings of the Silla dynasty at Gyeongju. Pine trees have singular symbolic importance in Korean culture.
Starting with this series of works, this large-format clothbound volume assembles the master’s photographs of pines and pine groves from the past twenty-five years. A selection of the most impressive pictures is shown in which Bae, Bien-U approaches the spirit of the places and landscapes with a contemplative, Korean-influenced visual vocabulary that even fascinates eyes schooled by Western aesthetics.
Exhibition schedule: Phillips de Pury & Company, London, October 27–November 19, 2008 · BOZAR Center for Fine Arts, Brussels, October 10, 2008–January 18, 2009 · Aando Fine Art, Berlin 28.3.–8.5.2009
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