Wednesday, 16 March 2011

Art Vs. Music

Art eh? I really enjoy going to Art Galleries (decent ones, anyway), but I’ve never really been good at talking or writing about them afterwards. I usually come outside, compare notes with my companions about our favourite pieces, shrug my shoulders and head to the nearest pub. There are some pieces whose impact has stayed with me for years, which I can still picture now (notably at the Sachi Gallery in London, which I have generally always left impressed). But even with those pieces which have genuinely affected me, I wish I could elicit some greater emotional descriptions about Art in the same way that I can about Films or Music. But sorry, it just isn’t really Me.

So, friends, don’t expect much from this!

Based in Itaewon, The Leeum Art Gallery is pretty good for 10k won (about £5). It’s a gallery of two halves, the first being devoted to traditional Korean Art, old tapestries, ancient royal artifacts, pottery and the like. To be honest, I fly through that part, and, perhaps being a foreigner and therefore not really understanding the historical contexts from whence they came, these older exhibits rather bore me.

Far more interesting is the second part of the museum, devoted to modern and international Art. Here you can find pieces from Korean artists as well as the likes of famous types like Mark Rothko, Willem De Kooning, Damien Hirst and Andy Warhol.  Rothko’s pieces (seemingly just two or three huge strokes of paint) seems utterly trivial, and kind of infuriating (why is he so famous and rich again?!), but I really like some of the Korean Art (especially Bach yiso’s “wide world wide”) and Song Hyun-Sook’s “8 Brush strokes” (Rothko: take note, that’s how you make the basic, interesting!). 

"great staircase"
For the foreign art, Andreas Gursky’s ‘Pyongyang’ is an impressive bit of photography (a huge hi-res shot of the thousands of people rehearsing at the North Korean capital’s epic’ Mass Games’), and I have to say that I enjoy Damien Hirst’s ‘Dance of Death’ too – was basically the biggest and most colourful cabinet of pills, tablets and drugs you’ve ever seen – Hirst does a good line in attention-grabbing Art.

(NB - Taking photos in Art Galleries is generally a good way to get shown the door - so if you wanna see more pics, go to the Leeum website )

The Gallery itself is a cool piece of modern architecture which is impressive whilst being neutral enough to let the Art breathe, as it were. It has this great staircase too.- wooooo.




So, I come outside, compare notes with my companions about our favourite pieces, shrug my shoulders and head to the nearest pub…. Except… there are no pubs in Korea! So we do the local thing: stop at a convenience store, buy a few bottles of beer and sat at the (conveniently-placed) plastic table and chairs outside and drink in the sun. And think of Summer. Ah, Summer, come hither…

Handsome Matt, rightly pleased with his Tacos
So, enough Art. A subway trip later and we are in Hongdae to see our friends Matt and Michele who have finished their English Teaching contracts and are about to return to the UK. Bless. Dinner came courtesy of Dos Tacos in Hongdae. I must recommend this Diner-style Mexican place for its cheapness, tastiness and the impressive speed at which they serve you some pretty decent tacos, burritos and the like. And beer. Yum.






After this, Motto is the next place. Again, Matt has chosen well. This is a pretty small but nice downstairs Music Bar with Hendrix and Beatles posters on the wall of the stairs, and a big screen-shot of Kurt Cobain greeting you as you take your seat. Write down requests in the book and they will play them, and even play the video, if they have it, on the big screen - cue singalongs to Radiohead and Muse as we down a few cocktails, and do Thom Yorke impressions. Yyyyum.

Liam, Jen, Lisa and Helen - Brits Abroad. MY Brits.

The main event tonight: a gig at live venue Freebird , for a monthly night they call ‘Round Robin’, where the bands play around the walls of the venue with the crowd in the middle, and play a song each in turn. If you’ve ever watched Jools Holland, it’s just like that. It’s busy, the acts are entertaining and diverse (just don't ask me what they were called), and it’s such a cool idea for a gig event that I spend almost thirty minutes trying to stop and hassle the (very busy-looking) promoter for a gig there for my own band. Sorry mate.
Nabi @ Blur-o'oclock



Last place (after the obligatory stop for an awesome kebab on the street - one of the many wonders of Hongdae), was Nabi – a nice underground Shishi bar (with its own pond and fountain – indoors!), the perfect place to lounge around on cushions, smoke pipes, talk nonsense, and put the icing on the cake of tomorrow’s hangover. Just got to remember where I live now…

Art Vs. Music? Finish your beer and make your bloody mind up.
Taxi's waitin'
x

1 comment:

  1. The reason you cant articulate art as easily as film/music is because you don't understand it, you are the viewer not the artist. Art is an emotional and intellectual world constantly evolving trying to honestly reflect the context of its time. When you insult Rothkos work you are actually insulting yourself by voicing your own ignorance. Rothkos working practice was a highly skilled and still today alchemic process, its not just a few strokes of paint, there is layers upon layers of carefully chosen colours that have been through a process that Rothko invented to add depth to his work. It took him his lifetime to get to this and his contributions to art is of greatest acheivment. I say go and watch some films and listen to some music ias it seems your wanting understanding and entertainment which is what art is not about, its a purely religious and philosophical medium one should be educated in.

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