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Yeoju International Everyday Ceramics Exhibition 2020: Making Colors

Bringing craftwork and painting together
Yeoju International Everyday Ceramics Exhibition: Making Colors

Samhwa Paints was an official sponsor of the Yeoju International Everyday Ceramics Exhibition of 2020, showcasing to the world its paint products and how paint and its diverse colors can be a medium of art.

The Yeoju International Everyday Ceramics Center has been spearheading efforts in Korea to reinterpret and modernize traditional ceramic- and pottery-making in the country.

The latest exhibition, displaying a variety of ceramic works that reinterpret emotions and their expression using colors, was the perfect stage for the artistic potential of Samhwa’s paints to manifest itself.

Color as a language of art

Magical Violet is the first color that spectators encounter upon entering the exhibition space. This color was chosen for its ability to embrace the dramatic ups and downs of human emotion—satisfaction, frustration, sorrow, or joy.

Koh Woo-jeong put on display a very modern and picturesque work that involved applying the traditional techniques of pottery-making against the magical violet backdrop.

Song Ji-yun has been praised for portraying virtual utopias, almost pantheon-like in impression, using bright, captivating colors. The magenta color adds even more to the energy of her painting.

Lee Dong-ha, a leader in ceramic art in Korea, added depth to his work with Samhwa’s Balloon Green paint. His reinterpretations of traditional blue celadon mesmerize their viewers against the balloon green backdrop that amplifies celadon’s elegant sparkle.

Lee Heul-ki is an up-and-coming artist expected to inherit and continue the tradition of Korean ceramic art.

The backdrop, painted in Samhwa’s Sunshine, provides a powerful prop for Lee’s monochrome work, imbuing the refined black-and-white ceramic with a vibrant energy.

Samhwa Paints x Yeoju International Everyday Ceramics Center

This exhibition is all the more special to Samhwa as its Aisaengkag Water-Borne Interior Pro and Urecoat paints have been used to provide backdrops to the messages conveyed by the ceramic works on display. The four spaces painted in Samhwa’s colors are artistic works in their own right and highlight the theme of the exhibition.

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Yeoju International Everyday Ceramics Exhibition 2020: Making Colors

2024.01.17

Bringing craftwork and painting together
Yeoju International Everyday Ceramics Exhibition: Making Colors

Samhwa Paints was an official sponsor of the Yeoju International Everyday Ceramics Exhibition of 2020, showcasing to the world its paint products and how paint and its diverse colors can be a medium of art.

The Yeoju International Everyday Ceramics Center has been spearheading efforts in Korea to reinterpret and modernize traditional ceramic- and pottery-making in the country.

The latest exhibition, displaying a variety of ceramic works that reinterpret emotions and their expression using colors, was the perfect stage for the artistic potential of Samhwa’s paints to manifest itself.

Color as a language of art

Magical Violet is the first color that spectators encounter upon entering the exhibition space. This color was chosen for its ability to embrace the dramatic ups and downs of human emotion—satisfaction, frustration, sorrow, or joy.

Koh Woo-jeong put on display a very modern and picturesque work that involved applying the traditional techniques of pottery-making against the magical violet backdrop.

Song Ji-yun has been praised for portraying virtual utopias, almost pantheon-like in impression, using bright, captivating colors. The magenta color adds even more to the energy of her painting.

Lee Dong-ha, a leader in ceramic art in Korea, added depth to his work with Samhwa’s Balloon Green paint. His reinterpretations of traditional blue celadon mesmerize their viewers against the balloon green backdrop that amplifies celadon’s elegant sparkle.

Lee Heul-ki is an up-and-coming artist expected to inherit and continue the tradition of Korean ceramic art.

The backdrop, painted in Samhwa’s Sunshine, provides a powerful prop for Lee’s monochrome work, imbuing the refined black-and-white ceramic with a vibrant energy.

Samhwa Paints x Yeoju International Everyday Ceramics Center

This exhibition is all the more special to Samhwa as its Aisaengkag Water-Borne Interior Pro and Urecoat paints have been used to provide backdrops to the messages conveyed by the ceramic works on display. The four spaces painted in Samhwa’s colors are artistic works in their own right and highlight the theme of the exhibition.

Next Story
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