COLORS FROM NATURE: YOO YOUNGKUK

2018-11-01IArtAsiaPacific


 

Some painters have love affairs with their models, others with mountains. Paul Cézanne made the Provençal peak Mont Sainte-Victoire his lifelong friend; Beirut-born poet and painter Etel Adnan found her companion in California’s Mount Tamalpais. For the postwar Korean painter Yoo Youngkuk (1916–2002), it was the Taebaek Mountains—which form the eastern spine of the Korean peninsula and rise above his coastal hometown of Uljin—that would guide him to his mature works after 1964, as he refined the colors and planes in his abstract canvases to echo their stolid majesty. It took Yoo more than 25 years, however, from 1937 when he first began showing his works in Tokyo, to make his long journey home to the mountains that would become his ultimate motif.  

Yoo has a colorful biography in what was a darkly turbulent time. His father sent him to Seoul in 1931 for high school. In order to escape the strict Japanese rule in Korea during its occupation, he was meant to then go to Japan to become a sailor. Instead, he ended up in art school at Tokyo’s Bunka Gakuin University in 1935. Throughout his eight years in Japan, he participated in shows as a member of the Neo Beaux-Arts Group, but in 1943, he refused to take part in the exhibition organized by the Art Association of Japan with the theme “The Beauty of Japan’s Prosperity” (Japan occupied Korea from 1910–45). He then returned home to Uljin and worked as a fisherman on his father’s boat. After the end of the Second World War, in 1948, his artist friend from Tokyo, Kim Whanki (1913–1974) secured him a job at Seoul National University, and together they founded the New Realism Group with Yi Gyusang (1918–1964), based on the concept of painting with pure forms. When the Korean War broke out just a couple years later in 1950, he survived the Korean People’s Army’s occupation of Seoul by selling chopped firewood and drawing well water before working as a painter for the Myeongdong Theater—though, in a humorously apocryphal tale, he and his friend Chang Ucchin claimed they couldn’t paint likenesses of Kim Il-sung and Joseph Stalin because they were abstract artists. In 1951, after Seoul’s liberation but with the war still waging, he returned home to Uljin, reviving and running his father’s soju distillery for four years before ultimately moving back to Seoul in 1955. It was then, after what he considered a “lost decade,” that Yoo began painting again. 

 

 

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