more artworks from this artist

Cactus No. 91

2015 / 2018 KLE04
Sizes:
31.5 x 25.6
43.3 x 34.6
Select finishing/framing:
Photo mount frame Hamburg
profile width: 0.79", Spessart Oak, Natural, 37.0 x 31.1" (External dimensions) profile width: 0.79", Canadian Maple, White, 37.0 x 31.1" (External dimensions) On premium paper (matte) not mounted or framed. Shipped rolled.
profile width: 0.79", Spessart Oak, Natural, 37.0 x 31.1" (External dimensions)
Select finishing/framing:
Photo mount frame Hamburg
profile width: 0.79", Spessart Oak, Natural, 48.8 x 40.2" (External dimensions) profile width: 0.79", Canadian Maple, White, 48.8 x 40.2" (External dimensions) On premium paper (matte) not mounted or framed. Shipped rolled.
profile width: 0.79", Spessart Oak, Natural, 48.8 x 40.2" (External dimensions)
page.detail.shipment.estimation.sale-item
Plus tax and $ 29.90 in shipping.

READY TO HANG

Out of the box, all LUMAS artworks are ready and easy to hang.

SECURELY PACKAGED

LUMAS works are always packed to the highest standard to make sure it arrives as perfectly as it leaves us.

ARTIST SUPPORTED

Your purchase supports the free and independent work of your favorite artist.

EXTENDED RIGHT OF RETURN

Say it with art. Because of the Christmas season, we have extended your right of return until January 10th!



BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Kwang-ho Lee is a Korean artist and university professor working in Seoul. He has been widely represented within Korean fine art circles but is still relatively unknown abroad. Considered to be at the forefront of the contemporary Korean realist movement, his work deals with the sensory experience of touch. Through his larger than life, hyper-realistic paintings he tries to make his viewers experience what it is like touch something, while merely looking at it. In his series, Cactus, the sheer size of the paintings – which measure up to nearly 10 feet – allows the cacti to take on a life of their own. The practice of painting the cacti as portraits pushes the viewer to search for a human gaze within the paintings, often resulting in a perceived reflection of oneself. In the words of Walter Benjamin, “To perceive the aura of an object, we look at means to invest it with the ability to look at us in return.”
VITA
Artist Kwang-ho Lee was born in 1967 in Seoul, South Korea. He studied painting and visual arts at Seoul National University. His work has appeared in many solo exhibitions throughout South Korea at prestigious galleries including the Kukje Gallery and the Hanjeon Plaza Gallery. Kwang-ho Lee lives and works in Seoul, where he is not only an artist, but also a university professor.