Invisible Space-Image 10061 - Lee Kang Wook: Catalogue Raisonné
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Classification: Painting

작가 소장, 2026
2025《1mm의 경계》, Place C, 경주, 대한민국
2024《Shifting Drawing: from Universe》, 라흰갤러리, 서울, 대한민국
2024《Shifting Drawing and Colors》, Jagad Gallery, 자카르타, 인도네시아
2023《움직이는 상, 변화하는 색》, Gallery Art Nasal, 울산, 대한민국
2022《변화하는 색》, Gana Busan, 부산, 대한민국
2022《가장 고요하게 빛나는》, Gallery Peyto, 서울, 대한민국
2021《움직이는 상, 변화하는 색>》, Gallery Lotus, 광주, 대한민국
  • 이강욱 작가의 작업은 '나'에 대한 생각과 탐구에서 시작한다. 작가 자신을 정의하는 단서를 고민하던 중 생물학을 떠올렸고, 이후 현미경으로 들여다본 세포를 통해 작가는 미시적 세계로 진입하게 되었다. 이렇게 아주 작은 스케일의 제 존재로부터 '공간'이라는 새로운 차원을 발견하였으며, 작가는 미시 공간과 거시 공간이 서로 연결되어 있다는 사실을 깨달았다.

The “Rice grain” image is a metaphorical unit used by the artist to describe microscopic visual elements. Dots, particles, and small forms may appear insignificant individually, yet through repetition and accumulation they generate a larger spatial field. These micro-units reveal space not as a simple sum, but as an emergent structure. The rice grain image visually articulates the connection between the microscopic and the macroscopic.
 
In Lee’s work, space is never presented as a stable or fixed structure. Aggregations of color that disperse like particles, repeating geometric forms, and layered gestures disrupt a single, authoritative viewpoint. As a result, the viewer is compelled to constantly recalibrate their sense of scale—moving between the microscopic and the monumental, the interior and the exterior, the flat surface and the illusion of depth. Through this perceptual oscillation, Lee reasserts painting as a sensory field rather than a representational image.
 
In his recent works, geometric imagery and the formal elements of abstract painting have become more pronounced. Yet despite this structural clarity, drawing remains fundamental to his practice. The artist’s gestures—traces of movement, rhythm, and tempo—function as events within the pictorial space. These marks do not describe a predetermined structure but instead register a space that is in the process of becoming. Lee’s paintings resist closure, remaining open as dynamic configurations that continuously form and dissolve.
 
Within contemporary Korean art discourse, Lee Kangwook’s practice has been described as “Painting articulated through sensory illusion” and situated within the trajectory of Korean Neo-Abstraction. Such evaluations point not merely to stylistic classification, but to a sustained inquiry into how abstraction can engage perception, cognition, and embodied experience today. Lee’s paintings do not aim to visualize invisible space alone; they ultimately question how we perceive, imagine, and inhabit the world itself.

2026.05.23 Updated: Provenance, Exhibitions
2026.05.03 Entry published

Aproject Company. "Invisible Space-Image 10061" In Lee Kang Wook: Catalogue Raisonné. Seoul: Lee Kang Wook Foundation https://lkw.type-g.com/worksPost.php?works_num=44 (accessed on 2026.06.25)

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