[NoHo Arts District, CA] – This month’s LA Art blog features Ken Gun Mun’s Strange Days of a Quiet Sun at Nazarian / Curcio.
Positioned within Los Angeles’s early-year exhibition cycle, Ken Gun Mun’s Strange Days of a Quiet Sun at Nazarian / Curcio offered a striking counterpoint to the spectacle that often defines the city’s art scene. In Strange Days of a Quiet Sun, Ken Gun Mun offers a meditation on silence – not as absence, but as a living, breathing force. The work resists spectacle. Instead, it lingers in that fragile space between stillness and unease, where time appears suspended yet subtly unsettled. Hosted by Nazarian/Curio, Ken Gun Mun offers us a window into our own angst, albeit through a more fantastical lens (though I suppose all of our anxieties are borne out of unproductive fantasy).

At first glance, the compositions feel restrained, even minimal. Muted tones stretch across the canvas, evoking a washed-out horizon or a memory half-recalled. There is a quietness to the palette – soft ochres, diluted blues, perhaps a suggestion of fading light – that conjures the eerie calm of a world paused mid-motion. Yet this calm is deceptive. The longer one looks, the more the painting reveals a tension beneath its surface, like a held breath.

What distinguishes this work most profoundly, however, is Mun’s integration of textiles and beadwork – an intervention that quietly but radically expands the language of painting. Rather than treating the canvas as a purely pictorial field, he transforms it into a tactile surface, where fabric fragments and meticulously placed beads become integral to the composition. These elements do not sit on top of the painting as decoration; they are embedded within it, interrupting and enriching the visual plane.

The textiles introduce a softness and material memory that paint alone cannot achieve. Their presence suggests the domestic, the intimate – echoes of clothing, coverings, or personal artifacts – imbuing the work with a subtle human trace. In contrast, the beadwork brings a delicate precision. Each bead catches light differently, creating a faint shimmer that shifts as the viewer moves. This interplay between matte-painted surfaces and reflective embellishments produces a dynamic tension: the painting is quiet, but never entirely still.

There is also something deeply singular about this combination of mediums. While mixed-media practices are not new, Mun’s restraint sets him apart. He avoids excess, allowing the beadwork to punctuate rather than overwhelm, and the textiles to whisper rather than declare. The result is a composition that feels both contemporary and timeless, resisting easy categorization. It exists somewhere between painting, fiber art, and object, occupying a liminal space that mirrors the conceptual ambiguity of the work itself.

Mun’s handling of space is further complicated by these materials. Forms appear loosely defined, as though dissolving into their surroundings, yet the physical presence of fabric and beads anchors certain areas, giving them weight and tactility. This creates a layered experience: from a distance, the work reads as atmospheric and diffuse; up close, it becomes intricate and corporeal. The viewer is compelled to move in and out, negotiating between image and object.

This material hybridity also deepens the work’s emotional resonance. The “quiet sun” of the title begins to feel less like a distant phenomenon and more like something held – stitched, assembled, carefully constructed. The beadwork, in particular, evokes a sense of time and labor. Each tiny element suggests repetition, patience, and care, reinforcing the painting’s meditation on duration and stillness. In this sense, the “strange days” are not only depicted but physically enacted through the process of making.

Ultimately, Strange Days of a Quiet Sun functions less as a static image and more as a sensory experience. By weaving together paint, textile, and beadwork, Ken Gun Mun creates a work that is as much about touch as it is about sight. This synthesis feels quietly radical: it challenges the boundaries of painting while maintaining an understated elegance.

It is in this delicate balance – between calm and disturbance, image and object, surface and substance – that the work leaves its lasting impression. Mun transforms quiet into something richly dimensional, proving that even the softest materials can carry profound conceptual weight.

Mun’s materially rich yet emotionally restrained practice stood apart – grounded in touch, labor, and quiet complexity. It is precisely this refusal to shout that gave the exhibition its resonance, marking it as one of the more contemplative and texturally distinctive presentations in Los Angeles this season.
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