Lee Ufan – Relatum Stage 1, 2, 3 and 4. *SOLD*

Serpentine Galleries is delighted to announce four new unique drawings produced by Lee Ufan on the occasion of the artist’s public sculpture in Kensington Gardens, Relatum – Stage (2018).

Lee Ufan (b. 1936 in Kyongnam, South Korea) came to prominence in the late 1960s as one of the major theoretical and practical proponents of the avant-garde Mono-ha group. The first contemporary art movement in Japan to gain international recognition, Mono-ha (Object School) rejected Western notions of representation, focusing on the relationships between materials and perceptions rather than on expression or intervention. Ufan’s minimalist works using only two materials – steel and stone – are characteristic of this school of thought.

He is best known for his Relatum series, which he has been making since the 1960s and has presented in various public spaces, including the Château de Versailles and the Lee Ufan Museum in Naoshima, Japan. Each installation comprises one or more light-coloured, round stones and dark, rectangular, iron plates. Relatum, the title given to Ufan’s public sculptures, is a philosophical term denoting things or events between which a relation exists. This network of relationships is depicted in each unique drawing the artist has composed for the Serpentine Galleries.

Lee Ufan - Relatum Stage 12018 

Lee Ufan - Relatum Stage 1 - 2018 Medium: Pencil and Paint on Paper, framed
Size: 45 x 57 cm
Unique Drawing
Signed and dated
Price: £ 5,400

Lee Ufan - Relatum Stage 2 - 2018 

Lee Ufan - Relatum Stage 2 - 2018 Medium: Paint on paper, framed
Size: 50 x 40 cm
Unique Drawing
Signed and dated
Price: £ 5,400

Lee Ufan - Relatum Stage 3 - 2018 

Lee Ufan - Relatum Stage 3 - 2018 Medium: Paint on paper, framed
Size: 37.5 x 51 cm
Unique Drawing
Signed and dated
Price: £ 5,400

Lee Ufan - Relatum Stage 4 - 2018 

Lee Ufan - Relatum Stage 4 - 2018 Medium: Graphite on paper, framed
Size: 38 x 47.5 cm
Unique Drawing
Signed and dated
Price: £ 5,400

These unique Lee Ufan drawings are available at Serpentine Galleries