Lee Ufan: Open Dimension, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Sep 27, 2019 to Sep 13, 2020 by Christophe C

Photo by Cathy Carver

Photo by Cathy Carver

Lee Ufan: Open Dimension is an ambitious site-specific commission by the celebrated Korean artist Lee Ufan. The expansive installation, featuring 10 new sculptures from the artist’s signature and continuing Relatum series, marks Lee Ufan’s largest single outdoor sculpture project in the US, the first exhibition of his work in the nation’s capital, and the first time in the Hirshhorn’s 45-year history that its 4.3-acre outdoor plaza has been devoted, almost in its entirety, to the work of a single artist.

https://hirshhorn.si.edu/exhibitions/lee-ufan-open-dimension/

Lee Ufan, ACORNS AND WILDCAT & TRACES, Cahiers d'Art, From June 7 to September 28, 2019 by Christophe C

Cahiers d'Art is proud to present two exhibitions of works on paper by Lee Ufan.

Cahiers d'Art is pleased to present Lee Ufan’s six new drypoint etchings, created especially for Cahiers d’Art, which are on display at Cahiers d'Art at 15, rue du Dragon.
Printed on Hahnemühle paper, the small ones are signed and numbered in an edition of 20.
Two 5-meter-long etchings on steel are produced at the Michael Woolworth studio in Paris and printed on Japan paper.

The complete series of Lee Ufan’s gouaches, “Acorns and Wildcat,” created in 1983 to illustrate the great Buddhist writer Kenji Miyazawa’s eponymous text, are on view at 14, rue du Dragon. These eleven gouaches, evolving from black to orange through blue and brown, are abstract calligraphies that not only develop the rich Buddhist consciousness of this famous tale, but communicate and portray its dreamlike and measureless scope

https://www.cahiersdart.com/news/2019/may-2019/lee-ufan-exhibitions-acorns-and-wildcat-traces

Major Exhibition of Early Work by Lee Ufan, Pioneer of the Japanese Mono-Ha Movement Opens at Dia:Beacon on May 5, 2019 - Long-term view by Christophe C

Relatum (formerly Iron Field), 1969/2019, sand and steel, Dia Art Foundation; Purchased with funds by the Samsung Foundation of Culture

Relatum (formerly Iron Field), 1969/2019, sand and steel, Dia Art Foundation; Purchased with funds by the Samsung Foundation of Culture

The exhibition features five large-scale works, including three recently acquired installations Relatum (formerly System, 1969), Relatum (formerly Language, 1971), and Relatum (1974). At Dia:Beacon in Beacon, New York, Lee’s work will be placed within the context of his peers who developed Minimal, Postminimal, and Land art practices contemporaneously, such as Michael Heizer, Donald Judd, Robert Smithson, and Michelle Stuart, tracing the formal, material, and conceptual relationships between these artists in Dia’s galleries for the first time. Opening on May 5, 2019, the exhibition will be on view for two years, encouraging long-term public and scholarly engagement with Lee’s work.

https://www.diaart.org/exhibition/exhibitions-projects/lee-ufan-exhibition

The Challenging Souls: Yves Klein, Lee Ufan, Ding Yi, Power Station of Art, 2019.04.28 - 07.28 by Christophe C

In April 2019, the Power Station of Art presents ‘The Challenging Souls’, a unique exhibition showcasing avant-garde artists Yves Klein, Lee Ufan and Ding Yi. Coming from different cultural backgrounds of the west and east, these three artists polarise, to this day, the relentless pursuit of art through experimentation, innovation and exploration. Individually and collectively, they have invented new artistic languages, media and art forms by challenging existing conventions and trends.

http://powerstationofart.com/en/exhibition/challengingsouls-pressworksen.html

Lee Ufan. Inhabiting time, Centre Pompidou Metz : February 27 to September 30, 2019 by MemberSpace

Lee Ufan_Habiter le temps.jpg

From February 27, 2019, the Centre Pompidou Metz will present a retrospective of Lee Ufan, tracing his career from the early works of the late 1960s to his most recent creations. The exhibition offers a defining vision of Ufan's unique oeuvre, showing how his artistic vocabulary has evolved over more than five decades.

Countering Frank Stella's celebrated formula and Minimalist slogan 'What you see is what you see', Lee Ufan favours an alternative: 'What you see is what you don't see'. As a painter, sculptor, poet, philosopher and creator of environments, Ufan's works function as revelatory devices, drawing our attention to empty space, the tension generated between untouched areas of canvas, the distance dividing two elements of a sculpture, the viewer's position, effects of light and shade: everything we fail to notice at first glance, but which is there nonetheless, playing its role in the making and impact of a work of art.

Born in Korea in 1936, when the country was under Japanese occupation, Lee Ufan recevied a traditional, Confucian education which was to profoundly affect his subsequent development as an artist. From the outset of his career in the 1960s, Ufan strove to achieve a balance between his Korean roots, his links to Japan where he studied and worked, and his growing attachment to the West (he exhibited at the Paris Biennale of 1971).

http://www.centrepompidou-metz.fr