Take me there, here. 2024
Solo show at Enseoul gallery(NL)
Jung’s practice is deeply rooted in materiality, and this latest body of work continues her exploration of clay’s inherent physicality and the emotional landscapes it evokes. With a keen sensitivity to the medium, Jung transforms the weight of clay into a metaphor for the human condition—our physicality, our limitations, and our desire for transcendence. "Clay is heavy. Our bodies are also heavy," she observes, drawing attention to the parallel between the density of matter and the psychological burdens we carry. Yet, beyond this heaviness, Jung’s work reflects a quiet yearning for something lighter, more elusive—a space between the tangible and the intangible, where dreams, memories, and fleeting moments reside.
In Take me there, here, this longing is rendered visible. Birds, clouds, and drops of water, with their ephemeral beauty, become recurring motifs that embody the tension between the grounded present and the distant, imagined "there." The exhibition’s title itself hints at this duality, where the act of striving for what lies beyond becomes inseparable from the experience of being anchored in the "here."
Jung’s mastery of ceramic technique plays a critical role in translating these conceptual concerns into form. The firing process, with its ability to freeze moments in time, becomes a potent metaphor for the permanence of impermanence. Air bubbles are trapped, minerals crystallise, and once-fluid forms are solidified on the surface of her works, creating a subtle interplay between presence and absence, between what is preserved and what has vanished. It is within these traces that Jung’s work finds its resonance—poised at the intersection of material reality and elusive desire.
This exhibition invites viewers to contemplate their own experience of longing and limitation. Jung’s ceramics are not just objects to be observed but portals into a broader meditation on the human condition—where the weight of reality coexists with the lightness of aspiration. Through her intricate balance of form and meaning, Jung creates a visual language that is both deeply personal and universally evocative.
Photography : Enseoul gallery