
A Chromatic Path
White Galleon Art Gallery is pleased to present Chromatic Path, an evocative group exhibition featuring new and recent works by Hyeseong Cho, Murray Duncan, and Heejung Shin. Opening August 2 and running through August 30, 2025, the exhibition invites viewers on a contemplative journey through monochromatic and neutral works that explore the power of restraint.
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By stripping away vivid color, each piece offers a quiet but profound meditation on tone, texture, and form. In Chromatic Path, minimalism becomes a language of rich emotional expression—one that encourages viewers to pause, look deeper, and find complexity in simplicity.
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Featured Artists
Hyeseong Cho (Toronto, ON)
Originally from Seoul, South Korea, Hyeseong Cho creates psychologically charged paintings that navigate human vulnerability, nihilism, and the thin veil between perception and reality. Her recurring motifs—windows and doors—act as metaphors for existential tension and the search for meaning in an unstable world. With degrees from Hong-ik University (Seoul), her work has been featured in leading galleries in both Korea and Canada, including the Seoul Museum of Art and Artist Project Toronto.
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Murray Duncan (Toronto, ON)
A self-taught artist celebrated for his expressive large-scale paintings, Murray Duncan's work blends innovative techniques with a deep personal aesthetic. His ability to push the boundaries of medium and surface has captured the attention of international collectors and earned features in Architectural Digest, House & Home, and The Globe and Mail. Duncan's raw, exploratory pieces reveal the emotional weight of abstraction and the elegance of subdued palettes.
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Heejung Shin (Guelph, ON)
Working across installation, drawing, and painting, multidisciplinary artist Heejung Shin reflects on impermanence, identity, and cultural displacement. Her primary medium—hanji, traditional Korean mulberry paper—is layered and manipulated into tactile, ephemeral forms. Shin holds degrees from the University of Waterloo and Kaywon University of Art and Design, and her work has been exhibited across Canada and Korea, most recently at Nuit Blanche Winnipeg and the Art Gallery of Guelph.