Mire Lee: The Milk of Dreams: Venice Biennale 2022
The 59th International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia
April 23 – November 27, 2022
Tina Kim Gallery warmly congratulates Mire Lee on the opening of the 59th International Art Exhibition of La Biennale di Venezia, curated by Director & Chief Curator of High Line Art, Cecilia Alemani.
Lee presents Endless House: Holes and Drips (2022) as part of the 59th International. The work takes its name from the premise of Fredrick Kiesler’s manifesto-like architectural drawings and models, exhibited at MoMA in 1958-9, which offer a drastic, radical vision of reimagined ecological thinking. The Austrian architect, active in the Surrealist scene in New York during the 1920’s, prized continuity, a pronounced endlessness that involved spaces transitioning fluidly from inside to out, undulating light without the sharp breaks of corners, and almost biomorphic spheroid forms that emerged more clearly in Kiesler’s drawings than models. Endlessness is defined as a core condition of life in Kiesler’s attempt to think a re-worlding, a proximate position to the marginal “lives” of Lee’s sculptures on view, themselves the latest iteration of her ongoing Endless House series. Lee’s forms evolve in state almost continuously - they undulate with rubber tubes and motors, spitting liquids, in this case glaze, and sometimes contain the recycled components of prior work.
In this current iteration of Endless House, glaze spurts over bisque-fired ceramic pieces, tied with rope amongst a tall metal scaffolding, the sticky liquid splashing into a metal repository below. Nearby, a pump akin to a dialysis machine ensures a consistent flow of glaze. A form on the ground writhes. Bisque-firing leaves ceramic brittle, yet hardened and a ready recipient of glaze, which is applied before a final firing. Endless House: Holes and Drips exists in a liminal state, elongated throughout the duration of the show - as time goes on, glaze will further accumulate over the bone-like ceramic, until it is fired after the duration of the Biennale exhibition.
In the meantime, Lee’s alchemical forms hold on to the brink of their current state, a sometimes agonizing elongation that is notable less in terms of the technologies she uses to achieve her biomimicry but rather in the intense affective responses her work offers. Lee has spoken eloquently on her fascination with fetish cultures and taboo desire, particularly with vore, or vorarephilia, a conspicuously violent, Utopic vision in which one desires to consume another in their entirety. While the desire is rooted in a relationship to another, it conjures a grander wish for a shared, impossible experience, a desire for continuity between self and other, inside and outside, through a breaking of boundaries that it acknowledges would be necessarily violent.
Endless House: Holes and Drips comes to its audience in fragments, constantly in motion, accumulating new, sedimentary glaze without end: its relationship to a grand form of violence is less clear, but in its partiality begins to fulfill some of the leftover promise of both vore and Keiser’s own endless house, a continuous state of becoming open and interlinked by being born into fragmented openness. Lee’s work could be seen as growing its own skin without end by way of a pump system normally used to sustain human life, echoing Keisler’s remark that his own Endless House was “endless like the human body.”
That the work will be later cast into a sedimentary form, left as a trace carcass, is further evidence to its alternative relationship to time and the physics which govern life as we know it, something akin to an ontological re-ordering, a place with rules we can’t quite fathom and yet strewn with glimpses of the familiar.
The dawn of surrealism in the 1920’s, and Kiesler’s adjacency to its practices, poses a counterpart context to the daily apocalypse of the world Lee’s sculptures find themselves installed within, though her gestures are intentionally flayed where a historical surrealist would perhaps lean into the baroque. Kiesler writes, “the coming of the Endless House is inevitable in a world coming to an end,” and yet Lee’s work demonstrates there is no prized state in realization, only a glazing that looks forward, and a fired shell which points backward, the house being truly endless, after all.
Her recent solo exhibitions include Carriers at Art Sonje Center, Seoul (2020), words were never enough, Lily Roberts, Paris (2020), Het is of de stenen spreken, Casco Art Institute, Utrecht (2019) and War is Won by Sentiment Not by Soldiers, Insa Art Space, Seoul (2014). She has also shown in group exhibitions at Kunstverein Freiburg, Freiburg (2021), Antenna Space, Shanghai (2020), and the 15 Biennale de Lyon, Lyon (2019). She took part in residencies at the Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten, Amsterdam (2018); Seoul Museum of Art (SeMA Nanji Residency) (2017, Cité internationale des arts, Paris (2015), and was awarded the Special Prize of the 2021 Future Generation Art Prize.
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Mire Lee
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