A growing number of Korean sculptors and installation artists are actively expanding into international markets.
 
More than thirty artists—including Kimsooja, Kibong Rhee, Kyungah Ham, Haegue Yang, Park Eun-Sun, Kim Seongu, Jaeho Lee, Seonghi Bahk, Seungmo Park, Choi TaeHoon, Yoo Young-Wun, Lee Hwan-kwon, Gwon Osang, and Lee Dongwook—are either holding or preparing exhibitions across the United States, Europe, and Asia.
 
Working across a wide spectrum—from traditional sculpture to video installations based on unique conceptual ideas—these artists see the current instability of the painting market as an opportune moment to enter overseas markets. As they aggressively pursue “international marketing,” the response of foreign collectors is drawing increasing attention.
 
Twelve artists—including installation artist Kimsooja, as well as Choi Jeong Hwa, Do Ho Suh, Gimhongsok, Haegue Yang, and Kim Beom—will present a group exhibition at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles (LA) from June 28 to September 20. Titled Your Bright Future, the exhibition will feature around twenty new works and aims to gauge the response of American collectors. Following its run in Los Angeles, the exhibition will travel to the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston in October.
 
Park Eun-Sun, recipient of the 21st Sun Art Award, is holding a solo exhibition at the Museo Marino Marini in Florence, Italy—the first Korean artist to do so at the city’s largest public art museum.
 
Running through the 18th of next month, the exhibition features approximately twenty “Oriental abstract sculptures” composed of cylindrical and spherical forms. Park’s works have previously attracted attention through installations in public spaces across European corporations and schools.
 
Kim Seongu, who sparked a “Korean Wave” in sculpture in mainland China last year, is planning to expand into Macau through an exhibition at the Macau Museum of Art this September. In 2007, Kim also signed a five-year contract worth approximately 1 billion KRW with the Shanghai Cultural Development Foundation, a Chinese cultural support organization. The upcoming exhibition will include three large-scale works—measuring 4 to 5 meters—such as a racehorse, a bull, and a giant hand, to be installed in the museum’s outdoor plaza.


The Artist © Ji Yongho

Works by Ji Yongho—known as the “tire sculptor”—along with those by Lee Yong Deok, Lee Hwan-kwon, Park Sungtae, Seonghi Bahk, and Han Ki Chang will be presented at the Saatchi Gallery and Phillips exhibition space in London for one month starting June 20. Following the exhibition, the works will be included in the auction held by Phillips de Pury, the world’s third-largest art auction house, on July 2–3.
 
Korean installation artists are also actively participating in major international contemporary art festivals. Haegue Yang will take part in the 53rd Venice Biennale, opening on June 7; Kibong Rhee will participate in the Vienna Cube Biennale in Austria; and Kyungah Ham will join the Asia Pacific Triennial in Brisbane, Australia, opening on December 5—each competing alongside international artists.
 
In addition, pop art sculptor Yoo Young-Wun has received a commission from a business figure in Dubai to produce fourteen sculptures depicting thirteen prominent figures from the Arab world. Photographer and video installation artist Yeondoo Jung is currently holding a solo exhibition at Tina Kim Gallery in New York through the 28th, while Gwon Osang and Lee Dongwook will each present solo exhibitions at Arario Gallery’s New York space from September to December.
 
Kim Chang-sil, director of Sun Gallery, commented, “The fact that Korean sculptors and installation artists are actively presenting their works to the global market and strengthening their marketing efforts reflects a shift in interest—from painting to sculpture and installation—among corporate and institutional collectors amid the instability of the painting market.”

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