


Mimi Joung
Further images
Talking about this body of work, Korean artist Mimi Joung said:
“This is one of
four pieces which are a personal reflection on ‘East Coker’, the second of
the Four Quartets, written by T S Eliot in 1940. East Coker is both his
ancestral family’s home and the place were he was buried. For me, the
poem speaks both about the place that we call home and the place where
we feel that we belong.
“Each piece contains the poem – hand
written with porcelain slip – which is taped into a series of sculptural
elements that form the foundation of the work. Each can be seen as an
abstract landscape through the different seasons of the year, as well as
an abstract interpretation of a human life, through the season’s of our
own lives too. In my beginning is my end. Spring is ‘in my beginning’
and the colours are suggestive of blossom, new life and the colours of a
child’s bedroom. Summer brings us to ‘In that open field’ – a sense of
adventure as we grow and escape into nature, away from our parents and
our childhood. ‘What is the late November doing?’ suggests a crisis, a
storm, the autumnal night. It becomes a circle of life. We have worked
hard, created a family and achieved something, so within this turning
point there is also a glint of gold amidst the tempest. In the final
piece, ’So here I am’, we reach winter, a quiet time where the land is
covered with snow, we rest and prepare for next season. We can see the
gentle eye of the child in the old person’s face. In my end is my
beginning.
“In Korean, we have a word, Huinoaelag, which means
that in every joy there is sorrow, and in every sorrow there is joy.
East Coker can be seen as a sombre poem but it is full of life and
learning and even a touch of dark humour. I hope that people will see
that I had fun making them despite the pessimism in Eliot’s words.
“These pieces are created in memory of my father who knew how to enjoy his life in every season.”