A publication of the International Sculpture
Center
September 2003, Vol.22 No. 7 On the Cover: Sook Jin Jo, "Cathedral: Korean Ex-Votos,"
2002. The Spokes of
the Wheel: Sook Jin Jo
My interest in
the Tao Te Ching—the great text said to have been spoken by the legendary
Chinese sage Lao-tzu in the 6th century B.C.E.—began many years ago
while I was living in Many years later,
after settling in
To see the actual sculpture to which this passage refers is to understand the meaning. Jo has constructed a kind of pyre, an open structure in which branches have been cut and assembled into square units rising from the ground to a height of 10 feet. The opening inside the branches is a spatial enclosure, implying a kind of sacred space, a static hollow entity or a celestial well where spirits of heaven and earth reside. Through the horizontal placement of the branches one can see the light, thus revealing the interior from all sides. One can read the meaning of the enclosure as containing the spirit of the senses. As with many of Jo’s constructions, there is an active engagement with the work as a shelter that nurtures body and soul. One could say that the Tao in Space Between is built on the absence of worldly things. Without them, this empty container functions as a kind of poetry. The Windows of Heaven are Open (1995), composed of a horizontal line of old and empty window frames abutted against one another, with two broken folding chairs placed on the floor to the right, holds a pregnant emptiness—what in Zen Buddhism is called by the Sanskrit term sunyata. Here, the self is allowed to vanish, to escape the drudgery of formal analysis, the redundant theories of identity politics, and the agonizing rhetoric of otherness and subjectivity.
A similar concept is embodied in the related work We are standing in His presence (1998). There is a trace of cerulean paint, faded and scraped, on two upright door panels. In front of each panel is a table frame, the right one larger than the left, that keeps the viewers at a distance. The sheer beauty and exaltation of found simplicity, as in Shaker furniture, is visual and practical. We are standing in His presence offers a statement of simple beauty that connects with the structural and physical elements. The form abides within itself. It transforms presence into absence and thus engages the viewer in a transcendent phenomenon. The concept of absence in Taoism functions less as a theory than as an affinity. More than a guide, it offers an inspired way of thinking and feeling, a way of discovering the language of art. This ancient though modest transcript holds a fascinating breadth of knowledge. Many of the intuitions employed in Jo’s constructions are indirectly noted in the Tao Te Ching. For example, there is the notion of oppositions held in suspension, the interplay and overlay between one force and another, the subtle reversals of power, the course of nature as a way of understanding the present in relation to the past and future—these are ideas related phenomenologically to the way one may approach an experience. Jo works with wooden forms in the context of an installation or an environment. While the parts make up the whole, the whole is always greater than the sum of its parts. I am attracted to the deliberate lack of precision in her work, the way things come together in a crude, unfinished way. This concept of the unfinished in her magnificent wooden constructions is intentional. As she has explained in a written statement, her work intends to express “the essence of materials” as belonging to “the order of the cosmos: the ultimate revelation of why things exist.”2
This is another way of saying that being and non-being are inseparable. But the focus on non-being is what allows being to emerge. This comes close to the spirit of Zen, a philosophy with a strong historical and philosophical affinity to the thoughts of Lao-tzu. In the West, the author Alan Watts has been particularly important in clarifying the relationship of Zen to the creative arts: “Although profoundly ‘inconsequential,’ the Zen experience has consequences in the sense that it may be applied in any direction, to the conceivable human activity, and that wherever it is so applied it lends an unmistakable quality to the work.”3 The spirit of Zen is applicable not only to the way we think about Jo’s sculpture, but also to the process by which her sculpture is made. The process evolves through the application of found objects—things from the everyday world, eroded objects that have washed up on the beach or have been deposited in a junkyard, subjected to rain, wind, heat, and snow. As our post-industrial world becomes infested with worn-out machinery and discarded gadgets piling up in our global dumping grounds, Jo has discovered in these “waste products” numerous possibilities for sculpture. Cathedral: Korean
Ex-Votos (2002) was constructed from 500 wooden objects suspended
in a highly congested arrangement from the ceiling of a corridor-like
gallery space. The impact of this impressive installation implied
a kind of excessive fusion between Jo’s indigenous Korean culture
and what she acculturated from her Brazilian experience a year earlier
in Itaparica (
On a visit to In keeping with
her sculptural aesthetic, Jo was commissioned to build Meditation
Space (2000), a work using tree trucks, branches, and old floorboards
from a former
In a work such as
Meditation Space that coincides with its environmental habitat so
completely—as, on a grander scale, Frank Lloyd’s Wright’s Falling
Water does in Bear Run, Robert C. Morgan’s recent books include The End of the Art World (1998) and Bruce Nauman (2002). Notes: 1. Lao-tzu, Tao Te Ching. Translated by Stephen Mitchell. (New York:
Harper Collins, 1988), Verse 11. 2. Sook Jin Jo, untitled
statement, 2002. 3. Alan W. Watts, The
Way of Zen. (New York: Pantheon Books, 1957), p. 146. |
|||||||
| _______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Gallery review from ARTNEWS Magazine June,2001 |
|||||||
![]() |
![]() |
||||||
|
Gallery review from SCULPTURE Magazine June,2001 |
|||||||