Photo of the appointment ceremony © Cultural Heritage Administration

The Cultural Heritage Administration’s Palaces and Royal Tombs Center announced on the 18th that photographer Myoung Ho Lee (48) has been appointed as its new public relations ambassador.

Lee, who earned his undergraduate and graduate degrees in photography from Chung-Ang University, has been developing a long-term project series titled ‘Art-Act Project’, which seeks to reawaken the essence of art. He is widely recognized for his works in which he installs large canvases behind trees and photographs the scene from a distance — a series that has become his signature.

His works are housed in major international institutions, including the J. Paul Getty Museum (Los Angeles, USA), Foam Fotografiemuseum  Amsterdam (Netherlands), Bibliothèque nationale de France (France), and National Gallery of Victoria (Melbourne, Australia).

From 2018 to 2020, Lee also served as the public relations ambassador for the National Research Institute of Cultural Heritage, where he presented the exhibition 《Landscapes with History》, which offered an inverted view of cultural heritage through the metaphor of a giant camera.

As the new ambassador, Lee will serve a two-year term until August 2025, during which he plans to produce an Art Fence — a project that transforms fences at heritage restoration sites such as Yeonghundang at Gyeongbokgung Palace and Seonwonjeon area at Deoksugung Palace into visual artworks incorporating painting and photography. The Art Fence is scheduled to be unveiled later this year.

A representative from the Palaces and Royal Tombs Center stated, “Through the Art Fence project, we hope visitors will experience palace and royal tomb restoration sites as cultural spaces in their own right.”

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