Jongjin Park captures the memory of paper in porcelain
In Seoul, Jongjin Park works with materials that seem almost incompatible at first glance, bringing the softness of paper into the heat and permanence of porcelain. The Korean ceramic artist has developed a process that begins with ordinary sheets, dipped in watered down ceramic slip, tinted with hand mixed pigments, then folded, stacked, compressed, and fired until the paper disappears.
What remains is a ceramic body that still carries the memory of each crease, layer, and pressure mark, as if the kiln has translated a temporary material into something geological.
Park’s work sits at the meeting point between hand, fire, and material...
