Lot Essay
Ik-joong Kang lives and works in the Chelsea district of New York City. In a statement quoted on the World Wide Web, he describes how he came to his unique compositions of discrete miniature painitngs on canvas, or on individual blocks of wood, mounted as here:
I developed the 3 x 3-inch format during my days as an art student at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn---but outside the classroom, in response to practical necessity. As an impoverished student, I worked a total of twelve hours a day at a Korean grocery store in Manhattan, and as a watchman at a flea market in Far Rockaway, Queens. Looking for ways to effectively utilize time spent on long subway rides, I discovered that 3-inch square canvases fit easily into my pocket and into the palm of my hand. My lengthy commute became transformed into work time in a mobile studio. (See "Dreams and Reality: Korean American Contemporary Art; https://www.koamart2003.com/Artist06.htm)
I developed the 3 x 3-inch format during my days as an art student at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn---but outside the classroom, in response to practical necessity. As an impoverished student, I worked a total of twelve hours a day at a Korean grocery store in Manhattan, and as a watchman at a flea market in Far Rockaway, Queens. Looking for ways to effectively utilize time spent on long subway rides, I discovered that 3-inch square canvases fit easily into my pocket and into the palm of my hand. My lengthy commute became transformed into work time in a mobile studio. (See "Dreams and Reality: Korean American Contemporary Art; https://www.koamart2003.com/Artist06.htm)