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Painting, Acrylic on Aluminium
Size: 13.1 W x 9.5 H x 0.8 D in
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145 Views
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The mountain is also bought water. The mountain is also bought flowers. We made a house in the situation of war, and then we had a house in the mountain, and avoid flowers.I feel grateful for small things, and it's a better future, and I'm breathing with us. It's unstable and I can't settle anywhere, and live like that time.Start from the house and white mountains that are filled with the house and white.The nature of the mountain mountain ranges, and scratch the bottom of the mountain is empty.The complex pattern that is filled with modern society and the most sea is empty, and the most sea is empty. I've decided to find answers in the mountain, and I decided to find answers in a lot of time.I always want to learn from the mountain in the mountain.I think I'm going to give everything.
Acrylic on Aluminium
One-of-a-kind Artwork
13.1 W x 9.5 H x 0.8 D in
Not Framed
Yes
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South Korea.
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South Korea
Mountains Are Mountains I am Park Han-ji, an artist who tells the story of a house built on a mountain. During the Korean War, countless refugees gathered in Busan, building homes that stretched up to the mountain peaks. Even amid the desperation of war, the mountains made room for both houses and flowers to bloom. The mountain, in its generous embrace, is like a mother’s arms—steadfast and giving. But aren't we modern refugees too, constantly searching for better homes, better lands? What is the path to mutual prosperity? In the nature of the mountain, I seek answers. For people like me, who live unsettled lives, always in motion, there is a certain anxiety. It feels no different from the refugees of war, endlessly searching for a place to call home. Even after the war, my journey of escape never seems to end. I yearn for the stability of a settled life, and I look to the mountain, which stands unmoved, to learn what that means. Modern society resembles a house built on a mountain—unstable, unsettled—much like the refugees who once sought refuge there. It mirrors my desire for movement and change, symbolized by the dynamic flow of planes and cars. Through my work, I aim to strip away the essence of the mountain, leaving it as a blank canvas, a space to share thoughts and reflections. I also draw on the image of the rock, a place where no home can stand, as a metaphor—a resting point for the values of nature and the world, through the portrayal of houses that cannot be built on rocks.
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