Closing Soon

Lee ShinJa: Drawing with Thread

Lee ShinJa

Aug 6 – Feb 1

Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive
Museum

Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive

2155 Center Street, Berkeley, CA 94704

Wed-Sun 11am-7pm (galleries close at 5pm through Jan 18)

Admission

🎟️

Gallery admission

Tickets available online or at admissions desk

About

Lee ShinJa: Drawing with Thread is the first North American survey of the work of the historically under-recognized Korean artist Lee ShinJa (b. 1930, Uljin, South Korea; lives and works in Seoul). Spanning more than five decades, from the 1950s to the early 2000s, the exhibition showcases the artist's bold innovations in fiber through forty monumental textile works, woven maquettes, and preparatory sketches. Lee began her career in the wake of Korea's independence from Japan in 1945 and is today recognized as one of the first fiber artists in Korea. Her artworks from the 1950s incorporate everyday objects and found materials, such as grain sacks, mosquito nets, and domestic wallpaper; notably, she used yarn salvaged from secondhand sweaters and bedding to make her earliest tapestries. Breaking with dominant idioms and traditions of craft, Lee integrated dyeing, knotting, weaving, and embroidery techniques to make increasingly large-scale sculptural forms at the intersections of art and craft, found and made objects, and figuration and abstraction. The works in this exhibition—the majority of which will be on view outside Korea for the first time—showcase the visionary output of an artist who has for decades forged new paths for understanding the artistic possibilities of fiber.

Tags

fibertextilecontemporaryKoreansoloweavingembroiderysculpturecraft
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