Korean-American artist Rimi Yang was born and raised in
Osaka, Japan. She moved to the United
States in 1986 and shortly after, settled in California where she continues to
live and work today. In addition to
having exhibited wide ly across the US and Canada throughout her career, the
artist has recently been shown in Copenhagen, Stockholm, Dublin and England.
Yang’s paintings -mostly figurative, but with a playful
approach to abstraction- reveal an intuitive, contrast-rich take on Eastern and
Western art history. It is as though
they are struggling to make sense of dualities which simultaneously inspire and
confuse us in their attempts to structure the world. Pleasantly suspended between familiar
polarities like east-west, male-female, high-low and old-new, the viewer can’t
help but be moved by the artist’s apparent search for meaning
In a recent interview, Rimi Yang pondered the idea that;
“Mankind tries to order the un-orderable, explain the inexplicable. Do we really always need to reason,
understand and structure, or could we instead seek out the vibration that
connects all life in an instant?
Yang describes the process of making her original paintings as a form of meditation, where
creativity takes precedence over the subject.
In her paintings, this process is celebrated with a technique that is
immediately recognizable. Within each
carefully placed brushstroke, there is evidence of iconic images being
de-constructed, techniques being mixed, and a calculated blurring of the border
between one and two-dimensional realms.
Her journey frequently references universal feelings associated with
childhood innocence, and urges for security, protection and love.
Amongst her most recent paintings, stunning female portraits
influenced by Old Masters hint at some degree of historical regression. By making a journey into the past, the artist
silently tributes the lives, minds and desires that trickle down from the
collective ego of art history.
In describing her works, Yang resists the temptation to
speak in a detached artistic voice, and rather finds solace in an old Japanese
saying: “Isogaba Maware”; a reminder that we should consider taking a longer
route, or more time, especially when we are in a hurry.