Marking Infinity. Featuring some ninety works from the 1960s to the present - including a new site-specific installation - the exhibition will be installed throughout the museum, beginning with the rotunda floor and extending up the six ramps of the Frank Lloyd Wright - designed building and into two Annex Level galleries. The selection of sculpture, paintings, works on paper, and installations includes Lee's most iconic works, many presented in the United States for the first time.
The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum presents Lee Ufan:
Marking Infinity, the first North American museum retrospective devoted to the artist-philosopher Lee
Ufan (surname: Lee, given name: Ufan), a preeminent sculptor, painter, and writer active in Korea,
Japan, and Europe over the last forty years. The exhibition positions Lee as a historical figure and
contemporary master, charting the artist’s creation of a visual, conceptual, and theoretical language that
has radically expanded the possibilities for Post-Minimalist art. His deliberately limited and distilled
gestures, guided by an ethics of restraint, produce emptiness that is generative and vivid; it is this sense
of infinitude that forms the material and substance of his art.
Featuring some ninety works from the 1960s to the present—including a new site-specific installation—
the exhibition will be installed throughout the museum, beginning with the rotunda floor and extending
up the six ramps of the Frank Lloyd Wright–designed building and into two Annex Level galleries. The
selection of sculpture, paintings, works on paper, and installations includes Lee’s most iconic works,
many presented in the United States for the first time. Objects are on loan from major public and
private collections in Japan, Korea, Europe, and the United States. Lee Ufan: Marking Infinity is on view
from June 24 through September 28, 2011.
Major support is provided by the Korea Foundation. Generous support is also provided by The Japan
Foundation. Additional support is provided by the E. Rhodes and Leona B. Carpenter Foundation.
We recognize the Leadership Committee for the exhibition, including founding support from Timothy
Blum; the Dedalus Foundation, Inc.; HyungTeh Do; Arne Glimcher; Marc Glimcher; Elvira González;
Tina Kim; HyunSook Lee; Nicholas Logsdail; Isabel Mignoni; the Naoshima Fukutake Art Museum
Foundation; Jeff Poe; Thaddaeus Ropac; Rosemarie Schwarzwälder; Masami Shiraishi; Sadao
Shirota; and Jill Silverman.
Lee Ufan: Marking Infinity is organized by Alexandra Munroe, Samsung Senior Curator, Asian Art, at
the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. Sandhini Poddar, Assistant Curator, Asian Art, and Nancy Lim,
Asian Art Curatorial Fellow, provided curatorial support.
Richard Armstrong, Director of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and Foundation, noted, “Lee
Ufan is an artist of extraordinary creative vision. Admired, even revered, abroad, Lee is surprisingly little-
known in North America, and this late-career survey, which we offer to the public as part of the
Guggenheim’s Asian Art Initiative, is overdue.”
"Samsung is proud to support this exhibition of the work of Lee Ufan. Samsung is a passionate patron
of the arts with many activities from the opening of Leeum, Samsung Museum of Art, in Seoul in 2004,
to sponsored Korean art galleries and exhibitions in museums around the world. We are happy that Lee
Ufan: Marking Infinity will bring the work of an outstanding and innovative artist to audiences in North
America," said David Steel, Executive Vice President at Samsung Electronics America.
Artist’s Background
Lee Ufan was born in southern Korea in 1936 and witnessed the political convulsions that beset the
Korean peninsula from the Japanese occupation to the Korean War, which left the country divided in
1953. He studied painting at the College of Fine Arts at Seoul National University and soon moved to
Japan, where he earned a degree in philosophy from Nihon University, Tokyo, focusing on
phenomenology and structuralism.
Lee is an influential writer on aesthetics and contemporary art and is recognized as the key theorist of
Mono-ha, an antiformalist, materials-based art movement that developed in Tokyo around a series of
seminal writings Lee published between 1968 and 1971. In these and later essays (selections of which are
featured in the exhibition catalogue for Lee Ufan: Marking Infinity), Lee constructs an aesthetic system
that challenges the closed objecthood of modern art. He eschews objective form for a relational
structure and spatial dynamic that induces us to encounter the bare existence of what is actually before
us, to focus on “the world as it is.” He promotes these mutual relationships between work, viewer, and
surroundings by shifting the artist’s role from an act of creation to a practice of mediation. Rooted in his
philosophical stance and going beyond the binaries of Eastern and Western aesthetics, Lee’s art and
writings partook of the radical global rethinking that transformed contemporary art in the 1960s and
1970s, when terms such as “system,” “structure,” and “process” recast the object as a dynamic event
occurring outside the studio confines in everyday time and space. His sculptures were shown in several
group exhibitions at Tokyo’s leading galleries and museums in the late 1960s and 1970s, a period when
he also began presenting his work in Germany and France. Coincidental with the early recognition of
his work in Europe, Lee’s minimalist, systematic paintings gained critical praise both in Tokyo and Seoul,
where he became a seminal figure in the Korean monochrome school.
Lee established a studio in Paris in the 1970s and has since split his time between Japan and France. He
was a visiting professor at Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris during the 1990s and
professor of art at Tama Art University in Tokyo from 1973 to 2007. From the 1971 Paris Biennale, which
introduced Mono-ha to Europe, to his solo exhibition Lee Ufan: Resonance at the 2007 Venice Biennale,
Lee has won great recognition for his work. He has been the subject of major exhibitions at the Royal
Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium, Brussels (2009); the Yokohama Museum of Art (2005); the Musée
d’Art Moderne de Saint-Etienne Métropole (2005); the Samsung Museum of Modern Art, Seoul
(2003); Kunstmuseum Bonn (2001); the Galerie Nationale du Jeu de Paume, Paris (1997); and the
National Museum of Contemporary Art, Seoul (1994). He was awarded the Praemium Imperiale for
painting in 2001 and the UNESCO Prize in 2000. Lee is the author of seventeen books, including the
English-language anthology The Art of Encounter (2007). In 2010, the Lee Ufan Museum, designed by
Tadao Ando, opened at Benesse Art Site Naoshima, Japan; and in 2011, Lee’s work will be featured in
two venues at the Venice Biennale, Palazzo Bembo and Palazzo Grassi.
Exhibition Overview
The exhibition has been designed in close collaboration with the artist and will feature signature works
from Lee’s sculptural series Relatum (1968–) as well as works from Lee’s five major series of paintings,
works on paper, and prints spanning 1972 to the present: From Point and From Line (1972–84), From
Winds (1982–86), With Winds (1987–91), Correspondance (1991–2006), and Dialogue (2006– ). A
selection of iconic work from Lee’s Mono-ha period will offer a rare appearance of this vanguard
movement in a U.S. museum.
Six key sculptures and paintings from the 1960s to the present will be installed on the rotunda floor, the
High Gallery, and Rotunda Level 1 as an introduction to the exhibition. These include Phenomena and
Perception B (1969/2011), a sculpture of the Mono-ha period that Lee will re-create for this exhibition
comprising a large rock, a pane of glass, and a sheet of rolled steel. In an act of controlled chance, he
drops the rock on the plates, cracking the glass on impact and bringing into being a relationship of
coexistence between them. Also included in the introductory galleries is a recent painting, Dialogue
(2008), composed of just two broad, grey-black brushstrokes that hover on an expanse of white canvas
ground. Like much of Lee’s work, Dialogue activates a resonance between what is seen and unseen,
made and not made.
Early Drawings and Painting Series: 1964–1978
The exhibition is organized both chronologically and thematically. Beginning on Rotunda Levels 2 and
3, graphite drawings and early paintings chart the initial development of Lee’s visual language. In
Untitled (1964), Lee strikes the paper repetitively to create a dense field of dots or lines, the two basic
units of East Asian calligraphy and painting that Lee learned as a child and that remain central to his
conceptual and compositional principles.
In 1972–73, Lee embarked on two painting series, From Point and From Line. For From Point, he mixed
ground mineral pigment with animal-skin glue, the traditional medium of East Asian painting, and
brushed this powdery, crystalline emulsion on a primed canvas in a performative, systematic act.
Restricting his palette to a single color on a white ground (cobalt blue or burnt orange, evoking sky and
earth, respectively), Lee loaded his brush with pigment and marked the white canvas with regular dabs
from left to right until there was no more left on the brush. Works in the From Line series pursue a
similar approach, moving vertically with a single gestural stroke, literally tracing the recurring passage of
cyclical time. This sense of temporal infinitude is enhanced by Lee’s choice to leave the canvases
unframed, allowing us to imagine the painting expanding into its surroundings.
Mono-ha Sculptures and Installations: 1968–1979
Installed in the galleries and outdoor terrace of Annex Level 4, and along Rotunda Level 4, the
exhibition features fourteen sculptures and installations from Lee’s historic Mono-ha period. Literally
“School of Things,” this Japanese art movement grounded in the critique of modernity produced floor-
based, scatterlike works that explore the phenomenological encounter between natural and industrial
materials, employing rocks, steel plates, glass panes, lightbulbs, cotton, and Japanese paper in their
barest condition to create vividly real spatial and temporal structures. Mono-ha works are essentially
performative and site-specific, requiring Lee to recreate them onsite. After 1972, Lee titled his sculptural
works Relatum, a philosophical term denoting objects or events between which a relation exists. “A work
of art, rather than being a self-complete, independent entity, is a resonant relationship with the outside,”
Lee has written. “It exists together with the world, simultaneously what is and what is not, that is, a
relatum.”
Relatum (formerly Words, 1977/2011) will be installed on Annex Level 4, presenting an array of floor
cushions, each loaded with one or more large, bodily stones. This uncanny work, conflating the outdoors
with the artifice of a gallery, encompasses the relationships between the site, its lighting, and our
movement through it. In Relatum (formerly Phenomena and Perception A, 1969), Lee takes a broad
band of latex marked as a measuring tape, lays it across the floor, and places three stones of varying
sizes on it at various points. The elastic band stretches and buckles, disrupting the system of
measurement it codes. Another 1969 Relatum (formerly System A) presents a cube of steel plates
whose seams burst with wads of artificial cotton. While presenting a physical opening up of the object
to the surrounding world, Lee explores the conceptual coexistence of structure and process,
permanence and mutability.
Relatum, With Winds, and Correspondance Series: 1980–2009
In the 1980s, Lee developed two series, From Winds and With Winds, in which free and dynamic
brushstrokes stir up a deeply empty space. While this painterly development appears expressive and
full, it reflects Lee’s increasing interest in painting as a visible structure of invisible forces: his touch
activates what he calls “the living composition of the empty spaces.” These compositions become
distilled in Lee’s Correspondance series, which comprise of a few black brush strokes rhythmically placed
on large white canvases.
Throughout the 1970s, Lee increasingly limited his choice of sculptural materials to steel plates and
stones, conceptualizing the materials as connected opposites: the factory-rolled steel is the stone’s
distant, abstract product. To Lee, the stone in its natural state belongs to an unknown world of
“externality” or “the other” that exists beyond the self. Arranging the plates and stones in precise
relationships—leaning against the wall or each other, or lying on the floor—the Relatum works revolve
around the spatiotemporal relationship between the viewer, the components, and their surroundings.
Dialogue Series and Site-Specific Installation
Annex Level 7 presents six paintings from Lee’s recent Dialogue series, including a two-panel folding
screen. Lee paints these works with the canvas laid on the floor, marking their white surfaces with one,
two, or three squarish strokes of grey-black oil paint mixed with mineral pigment. He sees emptiness not
in a negative sense but as a powerful field of contact and interrelationship brought about by minimal
interventions. In the same gallery, Lee will create a site-specific installation placing a single, broad,
viscous stroke of paint on each of three adjacent walls of an empty room. Dialogue—space (2011) sets
up a rhythm that exposes and enlivens the emptiness of the space, creating what Lee calls “an open site
of power in which things and space interact vividly.”
Exhibition Catalogue
The exhibition is accompanied by a richly illustrated 200-page catalogue surveying the artist’s
sculptures, paintings, installations, and works on paper from the 1960s to the present as well as the
artist’s writings, with an anthology of critical and theoretical works that includes seminal essays on
contemporary art published in English for the first time. The catalogue offers new perspectives on Post-
Minimalism as a transnational phenomenon and positions Lee’s sources and practices within complex
cultural, social, and political histories, spanning the mid-twentieth century to the present. This volume
includes an essay by Alexandra Munroe; a meditation on Lee’s poetics by Tatehata Akira, a poet, critic,
and President of Kyoto City University of the Arts; and a narrative chronology of the artist’s life and
work compiled by Tokyo-based scholar Mika Yoshitake. Priced at $45 in a hardcover edition, the
exhibition catalogue can be purchased at the Guggenheim Store or online at guggenheimstore.org
beginning in mid-June.
Education and Public Programs
For complete information about the range of public programs presented in conjunction with Lee Ufan:
Marking Infinity, please visit guggenheim.org/education. Highlights include:
Artist Conversation: Lee Ufan with Alexandra Munroe
Friday, June 24, 6:30 pm
Marking Infinity for Families
Sunday, July 17, 10:30 am–12 pm
A family-oriented exploration of Lee Ufan: Marking Infinity will incorporate conversation and creative
hands-on gallery activities. For families with children ages 5–10.
The Art of the Encounter: Readings
Tuesday, July 26, 6:30 pm
Poets, critics, and philosophers read excerpts from Lee’s writings on art and philosophy in the museum
galleries (in English).
Symposium
States of Emergency: The Agency of Objects, ca. 1970
Friday, September 16, 12 pm
Leading international scholars, curators, and artists examine the radical transformation of art circa 1970,
locating its formal and conceptual experiments in specific political, social, and cultural developments
that unfolded around the world and seek to create a new comparative discourse around a global history
of contemporary art. Organized by Alexandra Munroe, Samsung Senior Curator, Asian Art,
Guggenheim Museum, and David Joselit, Carnegie Professor, History of Art, Yale University.
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CONTACT
Betsy Ennis, Director, Media & Public Relations
Lauren Van Natten, Senior Publicist
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
212 423 3840
pressoffice@guggenheim.org
Image: Lee Ufan, Relatum—a signal, 2005. Steel and stone, steel plate, 3 x 260 x 240 cm; stone, 100 cm high. Naoshima Fukutake Art Museum Foundation, Japan. Installation view: Permanent installation, Lee Ufan Museum, Benesse Art Site, Naoshima, Japan. Photo: Tadasu Yamamoto
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
1071 Fifth Avenue, New York
Full rotunda and ramps; Annex Levels 4 and 7
Museum Hours: Sun–Wed, 10 am–5:45 pm; Fri, 10 am–5:45 pm; Sat, 10 am–7:45 pm; closed Thurs. On
Saturdays, beginning at 5:45 pm, the museum hosts Pay What You Wish
Admission: Adults $18, students/seniors (65+) $15, members and children under 12 free. Admission
includes an audio tour of the exhibition.