Exterior view of SeMA Nanji Residency © Seoul Museum of Art

Nanjido, which has been transformed from a landfill site into an ecological environmental park, is now set to become a new home for artists.

The Seoul Museum of Art announced that the “SeMA Nanji Residency,” created by renovating the Nanjido leachate treatment plant, will officially open on the 6th.

The studio, proposed in January by then-mayor Lee Myung-bak, is located midway between Noeul Park and Haneul Park in Sangam-dong, Mapo-gu. The two-story building has a total floor area of 355 pyeong. Each artist will be assigned an individual 10-pyeong studio space. The first floor consists of four studios dedicated to sculpture, while the second floor contains thirteen studios for painting and installation practices.

Ha Chong-Hyun, director of the Seoul Museum of Art, stated, “By providing promising emerging artists with private studio spaces, we aim to support them so they can fully devote themselves to creative activities,” adding, “We plan to cultivate this space into a cradle for the next generation of artists who will lead the Korean art world.”

Following an open call for applications held from February 22 to March 7, seventeen resident artists were selected. Director Ha explained, “A total of 240 emerging artists under the age of forty applied, resulting in a highly competitive ratio of 14 to 1.”

The first cohort of resident artists includes Song YoungKyu, Jeong Jinyong, Park SoYoung, Shin Young-Mi, Jung MoungGoog, Lee YoungKee, Park SangHee, Roh JungHa, Jang HeeJin, Kim HoJune, Shim A-Jin, Choi Sung Rok, Shim JeongEun, Kim YunSoo, Lee YoonMi, Song JeeIn, and Ahn Doojin. The artists, mostly in their mid-20s to mid-30s, will reside at the studio for one year.

By discipline, the group consists of four sculptors, three installation artists, seven painters working in Western-style painting, two Korean painting artists, and one photographer, with many having studied abroad. Most of the selected artists are also recipients of major awards from prominent art competitions such as the JoongAng Fine Arts Prize, the Dong-A Art Festival, the Danwon Art Festival, and the SONGEUN Art Award.

To commemorate the opening of SeMA Nanji Residency, the Seoul Museum of Art will hold an outdoor environmental sculpture exhibition in the studio courtyard. The exhibition will feature nineteen works by twelve invited artists, including Kim In Kyum and Kim Young Won, as well as four artists from the museum collection, including Ryu In.

Meanwhile, the Seoul Museum of Art plans to establish an information archive and an art education center for youth within the management building of the former leachate treatment plant, which now houses the studio, and use the facilities as public rest areas.

Director Ha stated, “We intend to create an outdoor sculpture park around the sedimentation tanks, and through a second phase of development, surrounding facilities such as the chemical storage building and flow regulation tanks will be converted into large-scale workspaces for installation art and exhibition halls.”

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