Kang Seung Lee



Kang Seung Lee
Hotel
June 10, 2022, 7 PM
Live stream (Zoom)


Kang Seung Lee will present an installation of his work in a hotel room during a live stream event, beginning at 7 PM on Friday, June 10, 2022. This is the final “annotation” of the exhibition how we are in time and space: Nancy Buchanan, Marcia Hafif, Barbara T. Smith, and coincides with the closing weekend of the exhibition at the Armory Center for the Arts, Pasadena.

The Hotel installation will be improvised, with all of the works arriving in a single piece of luggage, but is likely to include meticulous graphite drawings on paper and on goatskin parchment, and text pieces embroidered with antique 24 karat gold on Sambe, a traditional Korean hemp fabric. Lee’s work draws upon multiple histories and memories of queer communities, across different generations and locations, weaving them together to create dialogues across time and space. He has been particularly attentive to the erased or marginalized histories of a generation of artists lost to the AIDS epidemic.

The works in Hotel summon a range of artists including Alvin Balthrop, Peter Hujar, Gi Hyeong-do, David Wojnarowicz, and Martin Wong. Another series of drawings memorialize Harvey Milk, a member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors and first openly gay man to be elected to public office in California, who was assassinated in 1978. The subject of the drawings are potted cuttings from a succulent plant that belonged to Milk acquired by the artist Julie Tolentino and shared with members of her community, including Lee.

Lee’s Hotel is a specific reference to Barbara T. Smith’s The Cover Up (1976), a temporary installation created in a room in the Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles. Smith wrote cryptic notes on the mirrors and on paper, scattered around the room, suggesting a woman driven mad by a man’s inability to acknowledge her needs. She then made an audio recording of the maid’s response to the installation. “Clearly in this strange room a very unsatisfactory erotic situation had happened,” Smith recalls.

“The audio was made as I asked the maid if she was willing to be interviewed. She was terrific. A loop was made and played while the audience came through to see this installation. The idea for the title was that very possibly the hotel maids come across rooms they must clean where there had very likely been a disastrous sexual event and her job is to cover it up.”

The live stream event will include a conversation with Kang Seung Lee and guest curator Michael Ned Holte.

Kang Seung Lee, Hotel, installation view, 2022. Photograph by Ian Byers-Gamber.

Kang Seung Lee, Hotel, installation view, 2022. Photograph by Ian Byers-Gamber.

Kang Seung Lee, Hotel, installation view, 2022. Photograph by Ian Byers-Gamber.

Untitled (Nocturne), 2022
Graphite on goatskin parchment, antique 24k gold thread on Sambe
Approx. 34 x 25 in
Photograph by Ian Byers-Gamber 


Untitled (Fairies), 2022
Graphite on goatskin parchment, antique 24k gold thread onSambe
Approx. 33 x 27 in
Photograph by Ian Byers-Gamber


Untitled (Harvey), 2020-ongoing
Graphite on paper, archival pigment print, antique 24k gold thread on Sambe
Approx. 27 x 54 in
Installation dimensions variable
Photograph by Ian Byers-Gamber


Untitled (Harvey), Detail 2020-ongoing
Graphite on paper, archival pigment print, antique 24k gold thread on Sambe
Approx. 27 x 54 in 
Installation dimensions variable 
Photograph by Ian Byers-Gamber


Grass (Gi Hyeong-do), 2022
Antique 24k gold thread on Sambe
Approx. 44 x 23 in.
Photograph by Ian Byers-Gamber



Grass (Gi Hyeong-do), Detail 2022
Antique 24k gold thread on Sambe 
Approx. 44 x 23 in. 
Photograph by Ian Byers-Gamber



Images courtesy of Kang Seung Lee. Photography by Ian Byers-Gamber.