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People

Suh Se Ok Korean

On view at The Met Fifth Avenue in Gallery 233

People encapsulates all four themes of this exhibition—lines, people, places, and things. Trained in ink painting and calligraphy, Suh Se Ok here used repetitive strokes to create a complex image that looks like an abstracted mountainous landscape. Yet the pointed units are the character for “human” (人, in). The choice of the word “people” for the title, and not “person” or “man,” compels us to consider both the part and the whole, the individual and the collective.

Suh focused on material, medium, and the legacy of ink painting. Along with Kwon Young-woo, whose work is on view elsewhere in the gallery, Suh was part of an influential artist association of ink painters called Munghimhoe 묵림회, Ink Forest Group) that grappled with issues of style and materiality in relation to modernism and cultural identity.

This work will be on view for all rotations of this exhibition.

People, Suh Se Ok (Korean, 1929–2020), Ink on danji (mulberry paper), Korea

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