Exhibitions
《Documentary Style》, 2014.12.09 – 2015.02.25, GoEun Museum of Photography
December 08, 2014
GoEun Museum of Photography

Lee
Gapchul, Conflict and Reaction, A Man Lifting a Standing Stone,
Namwon, 1995 ©Lee Gapchul
The large-scale exhibition 《Documentary Style》 (December 9, 2014 –
February 25, 2015), presented at the GoEun Museum of Photography and the GoEun
Contemporary Photography Museum, examines Korean documentary photography from a
specific perspective: style, or form. It would not be an exaggeration to say
that this exhibition was long overdue, as it fully embodies the museum’s
sustained inquiry into the identity of photography through its past
exhibitions.
As the first photography museum
established outside the capital region, the GoEun Museum of Photography brought
renewed attention to the underexamined history of photography in Busan through
the exhibition 《Rediscovering
Busan Photography》 (July 16 – October 2, 2011),
situating it within exhibitionary and discursive contexts.
This effort
continued through subsequent related exhibitions, systematically researching
and organizing the history of photography in Busan. Furthermore, with 《The Origin》 (December 8, 2012 – February 21,
2013), the museum expanded its scope from Busan photography to Korean
photography as a whole, introducing eleven contemporary practices grounded in
both the historical legitimacy of Korean photography and the essential nature
of the medium.

Noh Suntag, How to
Use the National Flag: Appealing for the Strengthening of the ROK–U.S. Alliance
and the Continued Stationing of U.S. Forces, Seoul City Hall Plaza ©
Noh Suntag
Such diverse and serious
discussions on photography can also be traced to the 《Documentary Seminar》 series held at the
GoEun Museum of Photography from 2009 to 2010 over four sessions. This seminar
was the first attempt to reintroduce rigorous discourse on
photography—previously fragmented and centered in Seoul—back to Busan, once a
central hub of Korean photography.
Photographers, professors, and critics
gathered to engage in in-depth discussions and sharp debates on documentary
photography. The seminar sought to explore the meaning, value, and future
potential of documentary photography in contemporary Korean photography.
Across four sessions, the seminar
concluded by posing a critical and challenging question: “How can we explore
the possibilities of Korean documentary photography?” Believing that the time
had come to propose a response, the GoEun Museum of Photography presents this
exhibition as a provisional and alternative conclusion—one that is not fixed,
but open to continued evolution through future exhibitions.
《Documentary Style》 thus
presents the works of eight photographers who articulate the form and critical
concerns of Korean documentary photography through their own distinct styles,
offering a partial outlook on the genre from both formal and thematic
perspectives.
The GoEun Museum of Photography presents works by Noh Suntag,
Park Hongsun, Son Seunghyun, Lee Gapchul, and Lee Sangil, while the GoEun
Contemporary Photography Museum features Kang Yongseok, Lee Sangyeop, and Joo
Myungduck. Through this exhibition, the museum hopes to revisit photography’s
historical grounding and legitimacy while also reassessing its contemporary
position.