Jungjin Lee Explained

Jungjin Lee
Birth Name:Jungjin Lee
Birth Place:South Korea
Nationality:South Korean
Field:Photography
Training:Hongik University, New York University
Awards:Photography Award, The Camera Club of New York, Anonymous Was A Woman Award, New York, Dong Gang Photography Award, Yeongwol, Korea

Jungjin Lee (born 1961)[1] is a Korean photographer and artist who currently lives and works in New York City.[2]

Early life and education

Lee was born in Korea in 1961.[1] She studied calligraphy in childhood and majored in ceramics at Hongik University,[2] graduating with a Bachelor's of Fine Art in 1984. After graduating Lee worked as a photojournalist and later as a freelance photographer.

In 1987, she completed a year-long project documenting the life of an old man who made his living hunting for wild ginseng. This experience motivated Lee to enrol on an MA in photography at New York University in New York City.[2]

Work

While in New York City, Lee worked for the photographer Robert Frank.[2] Later, she took a road trip across the United States. In her travels she encountered the American desert, a landscape that she was deeply moved by and which became the subject of several of her photographic series, including Desert (1990–94), American Desert I–IV (1990 - 1996), On Road (2000–01), Wind (2004 - 07) and Remains (2012 -). Lee photographs these barren landscapes when they are transformed by the tumultuous weather, discarded refuse, decaying structures and by her own photographic process.

Lee's Unnamed Road (2010–12) was part of This Place.[3]

Photographic process

Lee uses a medium format panoramic camera. She prints on traditional Korean paper which she hand sensitizes with a brush using Liquid Light.[2] [4] [5] This print is then scanned and Lee further manipulates the image in Photoshop. The resulting image is a high contrast black and white print, in which the indexical brush marks are still visible. Lee effaces the technological capability of her digital camera to communicate her emotional state of mind at the time she takes the photograph to the viewer.[6] This process also results in an image that recalls traditional Asian ink painting.

Recognition

Lee's photographic practice is important within the context of contemporary Korean photography.[7]

Photo scholar and critic Eugenia Parry explores Lee's series through the lens of Buddhist spirituality in the essay that accompanies Lee's photobook Wind. Parry observes that in Lee's photographs she contrasts discarded props of human life with the land, symbolically acting as her on Buddhist teacher, asking viewers to "view ordinary things, love change, tolerate absolute incomprehensibility. Contemplate the temporal, recognize the celestial".[8]

Photo critic and historian Vicki Goldberg observes that Lee's landscapes represent her own, "introspective states and thoughts."[9] While the majority of Lee's work focuses on the land; in several series she explores other subjects including Pagodas (1998); crumbling Buddhist sculptures, Buddhas (2002); everyday objects, Thing (2003–06) and portraits, Breath (2009–).

Publications

Solo exhibitions

Collections

Lee's work is held in the following public collections:

9 prints (as of 27 December 2021)[11]

1 print (as of 27 December 2021)[12]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Jungjin Lee - Artists - Howard Greenberg Gallery. 2021-03-29. www.howardgreenberg.com.
  2. Web site: Park. Yuna. 2023-08-19. Photographer Lee Jung-jin’s new works reveal deep inner self. 2 February 2020. The Korea Herald.
  3. News: 2023-08-19. Capturing Human Moments Amid Chaos in Israel and the West Bank. 18 February 2016. The New York Times.
  4. Web site: Bowie. Chas. Jungjin Lee: The Stillness of Wind. Untitled. Pacific Northwest College of Art, Feldman Gallery. 1 May 2017.
  5. Web site: 2023-08-19. Lee Jung-jin captures poetic moments in 'hanji' photographs. 19 January 2020. Korea Times.
  6. Web site: Daniel. Caroline. The Diary: Caroline Daniel. Financial Times. 1 May 2017.
  7. Book: Sinsheimer, Karen. Tucker, Anne. Chaotic Harmony: Contemporary Korean Photography. 2009. New Haven: Yale University Press: Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. New Haven. 9780300157536. 158.
  8. Book: Parry. Eugenia. Ghost Lands in Wind. 2009. Sepia. New York. unpaginated.
  9. Book: Goldberg. Vicki. Shorthand Notes for the Spirit in Wind. 2009. Sepia. New York. unpaginated.
  10. Web site: 2023-08-19. Lee Jung-jin unravels poetic photography on hanji. 9 March 2018. koreatimes.
  11. Web site: 2021-12-27. Search the Collection. www.metmuseum.org.
  12. Web site: 2021-12-27. Jungjin Lee. whitney.org.
  13. Web site: 2021-12-27. The Museum of Photography, Seoul. photomuseum.or.kr.