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SANOH LEE b. 1996Aether, unknown
Listed by Gallery Kabinett
patinated copper, carbon, calcium, colored pencils, pigments on canvas
33.6 cm x 53 cm x 3 cm
Unique work
Includes a Certificate of Authenticity

$868

About the work

Lee Sanoh (b. 1996) moves fluidly between Oriental painting and ceramics, unbound by fixed formal conventions, continuing to unfold a narrative entirely her own. Her earlier work—rooted in the experience of losing her grandmother and a sustained attention to the fragile and the neglected—has since expanded into a spiritual register through its encounter with the symbolic image of the bird. Lee's practice begins from the moment of witnessing the death of a beloved being. As her sensibility toward life and death deepened over that period, she began writing poetry as a way of reflecting on presence and absence. The poems she set down in pencil naturally extended into drawing, and she found herself drawn to the texture of pencil marks rising off the paper like fine, crumbling smoke. Through this material exploration of pencil and colored pencil—pursued alongside the cycles of life and death, ascent and fall—the bird remained as a messenger. It is a figure that connects this world and the next, and at once a mediator that carries inspiration to the artist. The bird's spiritual and mythic image, the symmetry visible in its structural form, and the texture and shape held within the grain of its wings evoke a sense of balance, and of rising and falling, that the artist—as a human being—continues to pursue. In 《Fading, Rising》, the artist brings verdigris—obtained by oxidizing copper—into her work as a primary coloring material. Copper is a bio-metal that quietly performs its role within the metabolism of living organisms, including humans, while also being a material that rusts of its own accord over time. When pure reddish-copper reacts with oxygen in the air to form a reddish-brown surface, the artist corrodes the copper once more with an oxidizing agent, drawing out a blue-green verdigris. Through repeated cycles of oxidation and corrosion—sanding the surface down and building up new layers in turn—hills and trees evoking burial mounds emerged, along with bird-and-flower paintings capturing an oriole and pasque flowers the artist happened upon at her grandmother's gravesite. The traces of verdigris spreading blue across the surface act as a medium through which the actual elements that constitute living things are translated into the visual art of painting, making generation and dissolution visible. Just as copper rusts to take on new color, Lee Sanoh regards death not as an ending but as part of a cycle, picturing a world in which what has disappeared continues to live on in another form.

Artwork details+
Medium
patinated copper, carbon, calcium, colored pencils, pigments on canvas
Size
33.6 cm x 53 cm x 3 cm
Year
unknown
Signature
LEE SANOH
Edition
Unique work
Certificate
Certificate of Authenticity issued by the gallery
Shipping & taxes+
Shipping
  • Ships from the gallery's location (set per work, defaults to the gallery address)
  • Cost calculated at checkout by destination
  • Optional full insurance in transit
  • Usually ships within 10 business days, fine-art packed
  • In-person pickup available for some works (no shipping fee)
Taxes & customs
  • Listed price may include VAT applicable in the seller's country or the work's place of shipment
  • Duties, import VAT/GST, customs fees, and other taxes in the buyer's country are not included and are the buyer's responsibility
  • These are assessed by the destination customs authority and billed separately by the carrier
  • Sales tax may be added at checkout depending on jurisdiction
For general guidance only — not legal or tax advice. Obligations vary by jurisdiction.
SANOH LEE
SANOH LEE
SEOUL · b. 1996

Lee Sanoh (b. 1996) moves fluidly between Eastern painting and ceramics, pursuing a practice unconfined by fixed forms and free to unfold its own narrative. Stories that began with earlier works — rooted in the experience of losing her grandmother and a sustained attention to fragile, neglected subjects — expanded into a spiritual dimension upon encountering the symbolic image of the bird. Lee Sanoh's practice originates from the moment of witnessing the death of a beloved. During a period when her artistic sensitivity to life and death was deepening, the artist began writing poetry as a way of reckoning with presence and absence. These self-written poems, set down in pencil, naturally extended into drawn works, and she found herself drawn into the sensation of pencil on paper — the way it rose like dry, crumbling smoke. Through material explorations of pencil and colored pencil, and across themes of life and death, flight and fall, what remained at the end of these life-cycle meditations was the bird as messenger. It is both an emissary connecting this world and the next, and a mediating presence that brings inspiration to the artist. The spiritual and mythological resonance of the bird, the aesthetic of symmetry visible in its structural form, and the texture and shape latent in the grain of its wings all evoke the balance that humans endlessly pursue, and the sensation of life's soaring and falling. In ≪Fading, Rising≫, Lee Sanoh introduces verdigris — obtained by oxidizing copper — as a primary pigment. Copper is a biometal that quietly performs its role within the metabolism of living organisms, including humans, while simultaneously being a material that rusts over time. When pure red copper reacts with oxygen in the air and the surface turns a reddish-brown, the artist introduces an oxidizing agent to further corrode the copper, producing the blue-green hue of verdigris. Through repeated cycles of oxidation and corrosion — sanding the surface down and building up layers again — paintings in the traditional hwajodo (flower-and-bird) genre emerge: hills and trees suggestive of burial mounds, orioles and pasque flowers encountered by chance at her grandmother's cemetery. The verdigris spreading across the surface in blue-green — the actual elemental constituents of living things translated into the visual art of painting — functions as a medium through which creation and dissolution are made visible. Just as copper rusts and acquires new color, Lee Sano regards death not as an ending but as one stage within a cycle, imagining a world in which all that has disappeared continues to live on in other forms.

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Gallery Kabinett
Gallery Kabinett
Seoul

Since its establishment, Gallery Kabinett has aimed to play a pivotal role in managing and establishing promising artists, both domestically and internationally. Through strategic institutional introductions and comprehensive artist development programs, we seek to explore the various possibilities of visual arts by close collaboration with other industries. We strive to enhance the competitiveness of Korean art and align it with global standards, all while showcasing Korean artistic elements to ultimately exert significant global influence.

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SANOH LEE b. 1996Aether, unknown
patinated copper, carbon, calcium, colored pencils, pigments on canvas
33.6 cm x 53 cm x 3 cm
Unique work
Includes a Certificate of Authenticity

$868

About the work

Lee Sanoh (b. 1996) moves fluidly between Oriental painting and ceramics, unbound by fixed formal conventions, continuing to unfold a narrative entirely her own. Her earlier work—rooted in the experience of losing her grandmother and a sustained attention to the fragile and the neglected—has since expanded into a spiritual register through its encounter with the symbolic image of the bird. Lee's practice begins from the moment of witnessing the death of a beloved being. As her sensibility toward life and death deepened over that period, she began writing poetry as a way of reflecting on presence and absence. The poems she set down in pencil naturally extended into drawing, and she found herself drawn to the texture of pencil marks rising off the paper like fine, crumbling smoke. Through this material exploration of pencil and colored pencil—pursued alongside the cycles of life and death, ascent and fall—the bird remained as a messenger. It is a figure that connects this world and the next, and at once a mediator that carries inspiration to the artist. The bird's spiritual and mythic image, the symmetry visible in its structural form, and the texture and shape held within the grain of its wings evoke a sense of balance, and of rising and falling, that the artist—as a human being—continues to pursue. In 《Fading, Rising》, the artist brings verdigris—obtained by oxidizing copper—into her work as a primary coloring material. Copper is a bio-metal that quietly performs its role within the metabolism of living organisms, including humans, while also being a material that rusts of its own accord over time. When pure reddish-copper reacts with oxygen in the air to form a reddish-brown surface, the artist corrodes the copper once more with an oxidizing agent, drawing out a blue-green verdigris. Through repeated cycles of oxidation and corrosion—sanding the surface down and building up new layers in turn—hills and trees evoking burial mounds emerged, along with bird-and-flower paintings capturing an oriole and pasque flowers the artist happened upon at her grandmother's gravesite. The traces of verdigris spreading blue across the surface act as a medium through which the actual elements that constitute living things are translated into the visual art of painting, making generation and dissolution visible. Just as copper rusts to take on new color, Lee Sanoh regards death not as an ending but as part of a cycle, picturing a world in which what has disappeared continues to live on in another form.

Artwork details+
Medium
patinated copper, carbon, calcium, colored pencils, pigments on canvas
Size
33.6 cm x 53 cm x 3 cm
Year
unknown
Signature
LEE SANOH
Edition
Unique work
Certificate
Certificate of Authenticity issued by the gallery
Shipping & taxes+
Shipping
  • Ships from the gallery's location (set per work, defaults to the gallery address)
  • Cost calculated at checkout by destination
  • Optional full insurance in transit
  • Usually ships within 10 business days, fine-art packed
  • In-person pickup available for some works (no shipping fee)
Taxes & customs
  • Listed price may include VAT applicable in the seller's country or the work's place of shipment
  • Duties, import VAT/GST, customs fees, and other taxes in the buyer's country are not included and are the buyer's responsibility
  • These are assessed by the destination customs authority and billed separately by the carrier
  • Sales tax may be added at checkout depending on jurisdiction
For general guidance only — not legal or tax advice. Obligations vary by jurisdiction.
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$868