Cho Duck Hyun, Dog of Ashkelon, 2000 © Cho Duck Hyun

Installation artist Cho Duck Hyun (43) has been honored with an invitation to hold a solo exhibition at the Jeu de Paume in Paris, France, becoming the second Korean artist to be invited after Lee Ufan. The exhibition will run from October 27 to January 21 of next year.
Jeu de Paume is a museum that focuses less on displaying its permanent collection and more on organizing curated exhibitions featuring promising living artists. Cho’s exhibition has been planned as part of an invitational exhibition presenting mid-career artists from Korea, China, and Japan.

The exhibition opens on the 27th with a performance in which four French archaeologists, including Valérie Cook, excavate twenty life-size iron dog sculptures that had been buried in advance in the Tuileries Garden next to the museum. The excavation will be deliberately halted midway, leaving the work in an unfinished state outdoors.

The situation of this inventive “fictional excavation project” was conceived through the imagination of novelist Yi In-hwa. Drawing a clue from a dog cemetery actually excavated in 1991 at Ashkelon on the Mediterranean coast of Israel, the writer created a fictional narrative connecting Korea and France titled The Dogs of Ashkelon—A Journey Toward a Strange God, written to a length of approximately 200 manuscript pages.

Earlier this spring, Cho presented an exhibition titled Gurim Village Project in Gurim Village, Yeongam-gun, Jeollanam-do, which also featured twenty iron dog sculptures. After observing the project at the time, Daniel Abadie, director of Jeu de Paume, proposed the Paris exhibition. The dog sculptures from Gurim Village will likewise be installed inside a space titled the “Room of Mirrors” constructed within the museum.

Cho graduated from the College of Fine Arts at Seoul National University and its graduate school. He has received several awards including the Grand Prize at the Dong-A Art Festival (1990) and the Young Artist of the Year Award from the Ministry of Culture (1995), and currently serves as a professor in the College of Fine Arts at Ewha Womans University.

References