Noh Suntag, In search of lost thermos bottles #CAL2601, 2010–2011, Archival pigment print, variable dimensions © Noh Suntag

The Gwangju Museum of Art presents the commemorative photography exhibition 《Bloody Bundan Blues》 from September 4 to November 11, 2018, in celebration of the 2018 Gwangju Biennale. The exhibition is held at the Gwangju Museum of Photography, located within the Gwangju Culture and Art Center, with the opening ceremony scheduled for September 11 at 5 PM.

Invited for this exhibition is photographer Noh Suntag, whose works explore the realities of Korea’s division through photography. Noh was the first photographer ever selected for the Korea Artist Prize hosted by the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art(MMCA) in 2014, and he continues to make a profound impact in the field of documentary photography.

Noh has long captured and revealed scenes from the front lines of social conflict, investigating what he calls the “malfunction of division”—the contradictions produced within both South and North Korea by their ideological confrontation.

The exhibition’s title, 《Bloody Bundan Blues》, metaphorically expresses how violence and coercion have been exercised for regime maintenance—not only in North Korea, which has consolidated a hereditary dictatorship through oppression and isolation, but also in South Korea, which pursues freedom and democracy yet remains complicit in systemic violence.

Independent curator and photography critic Choi Yeon-ha describes Noh as a “sincere photographer whose collected scenes, gathered like a ragpicker from the deranged realities of the post-division era, provoke not only reflection on photographic form but also cross-insight into the historical life and conditions of our time represented by his images.”

This exhibition offers a comprehensive look at Noh’s documentary photographs exposing the contradictions of the divided peninsula, as well as the accompanying texts written by the artist himself, which invite viewers to empathize deeply with the absurdities and dysfunctions of division.

The main body of the exhibition centers on Noh’s Red Frame series, composed of three parts—North Korea within North Korea, North Korea within South Korea, and encounters between North Koreans and South Koreans in North Korea—revealing through images and texts how the contradictions and conflicts of division remain embedded within both societies.

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