The National Museum
of Modern and Contemporary Art (MMCA) has selected artist Inhwan Oh (50) as the
winner of the “Artist of the Year 2015.” Oh received the award for his
project Finding Blind Spots, which expands the notion
of blind spots from their spatial meaning into social and cultural contexts.
The MMCA and the
SBS Foundation, co-organizers of the “Artist of the Year” award, announced the
winner at an awards ceremony held at 5 p.m. on the 6th. Until last year, the
awardee was announced to the press without a separate ceremony, but starting
this year, the format has changed to heighten public attention. The finalists
for the award were Inhwan Oh, Kim Kira (41), Nahyun (45), and Ha Tae-beom (41).
Oh is an artist who
carries out participatory and site-specific projects that utilize the context
of particular spaces and times. Beginning with issues of his own identity as a
gay man, he has posed fundamental questions about the relationship between social
regulations and art, developing works that are conceptual and culturally
critical. Based on personal experiences, he deconstructs and reinterprets
cultural codes shaped within patriarchal society and explores the relationship
between the individual and the collective. He also incorporates into his works
contemporary art keywords such as difference, diversity, and communication,
producing concrete and tangible works that connect to everyday life.
The award-winning
project Finding Blind Spots consists of multiple
individual works, including Reciprocal Viewing
System, My Blind Spot –
Interview, Guidelines for Finding One’s Own Personal
Space, My Blind Spot –
Docent, I Am Not an Artist/I Am an Artist,
and On My Way to Blind Spots.
Reciprocal
Viewing System uses the blind spots of CCTV cameras installed in
the exhibition hall to offer visitors a spatial experience of blind
spots. My Blind Spot – Interview collects stories
of how individuals encounter blind spots in everyday life. For example,
interviews with military veterans recount experiences of finding their own
private spaces during barracks life. This connects with On My Way
to Blind Spots, in which Oh collects methods of reclaiming such
personal blind spots during military service and compiles them into a kind of
guide to discovering blind spots.
The judging panel
praised Oh, saying: “He delivers a clear message with strong impact and
addresses major issues of contemporary society in a uniquely original way.”
Oh graduated from
the Department of Sculpture at Seoul National University, earned a master’s
degree at the Graduate School of the same university, and completed a master’s
program at Hunter College, City University of New York.
He has held solo
exhibitions including 《TRAnS》(2002, Art Sonje Center),
《Writing on the Street》(2012,
Sindoh Cultural Space), and 《Finding Blind Spots》(2014, Gallery Factory), and participated in group exhibitions such
as 《Playground》(2012, Arko Art
Center) and 《Spectrum – Spectrum》(2014, PLATEAU).
The “Artist of the
Year” exhibition, organized annually since 2012 as a successor to MMCA’s
“Artist of the Year” (1995–2010), selected four finalists in March of this
year, each of whom received 40 million KRW in support. Their finalist works
have been on view at MMCA Seoul’s Galleries 3 and 4 from August 4 to November
1. In December, SBS will broadcast a contemporary art documentary featuring the
works of the sponsored artists and the final awardee on its channel.