Lee Bul ©Studio Lee Bul

Lee Bul has been selected as the 2019 Ho-Am Prize laureate in the arts. Recognized for her critical engagement with society, historical awareness, and humanistic exploration of utopia, she has established herself as a leading figure in contemporary Korean art. Her work, which intertwines personal narratives with broader social critiques, has received increasing international attention. Recently, she held major retrospective exhibitions at the Hayward Gallery in London and Gropius Bau in Berlin, and participated in the Encounters sector at Art Basel Hong Kong 2019.

In the same year, Lee Bul was invited to the main exhibition of the 58th Venice Biennale, marking the first time in 20 years that a Korean artist has been re-invited to the Biennale’s central exhibition. Later this year, she is scheduled to hold her first domestic solo exhibition in three years at PKM Gallery in Seoul.

The Ho-Am Prize, which Lee Bul has been awarded, was established in 1990 by Samsung Chairman Lee Kun-hee in honor of Ho-Am Lee Byung-chul, the company’s founder. The award celebrates outstanding achievements in various fields and reflects Lee Byung-chul's philosophy of prioritizing talent and social contribution. Previous recipients of the Ho-Am Prize in the arts include video artist Nam June Paik, film director Im Kwon-taek, novelist Shin Kyung-sook, and opera singer Youn Kwang-chul.

This year’s jury panel for the Ho-Am Prize in the arts was chaired by Professor Emeritus Lee Seung-won from Seoul Women’s University, along with Professor Ko Hyung-jin from Korea University, Professor Shin Hye-kyung from Seoul National University, Professor Woo Chan-je from Sogang University, Professor Lee Yoon-young from Yonsei University, Professor Lee In-beom from Sangmyung University, and Professor Hong Seung-chan from Korea National University of Arts.

Other laureates of the 2019 Ho-Am Prize include Marvin Chun, distinguished professor at Yale University, who was awarded the prize in science; Andrew Kang, professor at UC San Diego, in engineering; and Oh Woo-taek, director of the Brain Science Research Institute at KIST, in medicine. The community service prize was awarded to Love Asia, a non-profit organization supporting migrant welfare in Korea.

The award ceremony is scheduled to take place on May 31 at the Ho-Am Art Hall, where each laureate will receive a certificate, a medal, and a cash prize of 300 million KRW.

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