Sangmin Lee

- / Cannon Gallery

Still Lives in Transition arranges an ongoing collection of made/modified/found objects where abundance is made within limitation.
 
Each object is like a memory that is carried forward. From homes to suitcases, between studio, exhibition, storage, and back, this accumulation of objects adapts to the uncertainty of place. Arranged together, they describe how the past is always negotiated in the present— A recollection that reimagines possibilities. 
 
It inhabits the contradictions between architecture and ornamentation, nature and construction, individual and collective memories. They are constellations in search of meaning, ecosystems unrooted, still lives in transition, seeking moments of stillness.


Sangmin Lee was born and raised in St. James Town (Toronto, Canada), one of the densest high-rise communities in Canada. It is an offshoot of Towers in the Park, a model of modern dwellings invented by Le Corbusier. With thoughts of utopia, it was meant to accommodate large populations with little room else for infrastructure and ornamentation.  Despite its shortcomings, St. James Town is now one of the most ethnically rich neighborhoods in Canada and is sometimes known as "the world within a block." 
 
Somewhere between these concrete enclosures and lived space, between drywall and parquet floor tiles, are the stories of cultural survival that centers Lee’s practice. Here, he looks to process, the unfixed, the tangential, and beyond—to wander peripherally into the margins and towards expansive narratives. 

Panel discussion

Space for Artists: Panel Discussion

- / The Inc.

Panel discussion

Space for Artists: Panel Discussion

- / The Inc.