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A friend spoke up recently, confident
he had the Museum of New Art figured out. “It’s all him,
isn’t it?” he said, in revelation and doubt.
But that’s what’s interesting.
Museum of New Art director Jef
Bourgeau has a reputation that sometimes overshadows the
impact of his exhibitions. Bourgeau’s art excursions
both charm and annoy the public. But no matter where you
fall, it’s easy to see that Bourgeau is trying to use
the museum as a venue for institutional critique. His
shows question the curator’s role, the validity of
artistic “integrity” and the relevance of museums in the
information age.
Alternately, MONA is also simply a
noncommercial exhibition space for new art. The current
exhibition, Gang of Five + 1, curated by Detroit
artist Hyun Jung Kim, focuses attention on the South
Korean diaspora. Kim and five other South Korean female
artists from New York, Chicago, London, Los Angeles and
Detroit present work in painting, sculpture, collage,
printmaking and installation. The show is in two parts:
Downstairs, Artoaster’s Toast is a one-person
show by Kim; upstairs is the group show, Sweet Talk.
In her curator’s statement, Kim writes
that in the ’90s, “the South Korean art market benefited
from a protectionist currency policy aimed at keeping
money at home by imposing stringent taxes on outgoing
funds. This, along with a deeply ingrained respect for
art and culture, has created a thriving market for
contemporary Korean artists within the country."
Much of the work in this exhibit
transcends clichéd cultural references, showcasing a
contemporary awareness of East Asian art. In
Artoaster’s Toast, Kim uses hot glue to an almost
fanatical degree and her reliance on the clear, gooey
and sticky mass is bewildering. In one room, two large,
fish-shaped wall reliefs of hot glue on plastic mesh
don’t have much to offer, but a series of small, framed
pieces in an adjacent room is another story. Collages of
iridescent fabric, magazine ads and plastic mesh are
covered in swirls of glue, duplicating the shapes and
patterns on consumer packaging.
There are standouts in the Sweet
Talk group show. Hee Kyung Chun’s paintings,
collages and prints are hybrids of narrative imagery and
graphic design, resulting in delicate yet powerful
pieces at their most successful, and decorative pastiche
at their least. Hyun Seon Kang’s large digital print is
a self-portrait of the artist peeking through blue
fabric. Her piece is surrounded by blue walls. It’s a
fun and playful investigation of space that, through the
use of commercial materials and processes, flirts with
advertising design, although it is definitely fine art.
Unfortunately, this exhibition, as a
whole, falls short of developing any profound dialogue
between its constituent parts — installation and tone
make the exhibition seem disjointed. Perhaps this was
partly an attempt on the curator’s part to give each
artist her own space. It doesn’t help that the truncated
network of halls, rooms and open spaces at MONA make
most shows seem incomplete.
But, even with its shortcomings,
Gang of Five +1 still manages to represent a part of
the contemporary art dialogue that, as Detroiters, we’re
not regularly privy to. Contemporary East Asian art is
some of the most compelling and challenging work being
made today, and even if this show isn’t awe-inspiring,
it is an honest attempt by a local artist and
institution to introduce an important part of the global
art community to a deserving public.
Through Oct. 29, at the Museum of New
Art, 7 S. Saginaw, Pontiac; 248-210-7560.

Nolan Simon writes about art for Metro
Times. Send comments to
letters@metrotimes.com. |