Atta Kim, Museum Project #019 - Field series, 1997 ©Atta Kim

Atta Kim’s solo exhibition 《ATTA KIM : ON-AIR》 was held at the International Center of Photography (ICP) in New York from June 8 to August 27, 2006, marking the first solo exhibition by a Korean artist at ICP. Occupying the entire first floor of the museum, this large-scale exhibition was realized after three years of planning and preparation by ICP.

The exhibition presents 25 works spanning several major series: following ‘The Museum Project’, which was produced between 1995 and 2002, the show includes works from the ‘ON-AIR Project’ initiated in 2002, such as the ‘Last Supper,’ ‘DMZ series,’ and ‘Self-Portrait series,’ as well as the most recent works from the ‘New York series’ and the ‘Ice Monologue series.’ Most of the exhibited works are large-scale pieces measuring approximately 190 × 250 cm, and all works are produced with Plexiglas frames.

Last Supper, created by layering 65 images of each figure—Jesus and the twelve disciples—into a single gesture, is exhibited at a monumental scale of 150 × 850 cm. At the same time, one work measuring 4 × 30 meters is installed on the south-facing exterior window of the ICP building, a signature architectural feature of the museum, while another work from ‘The Museum Project’ is installed on the east-facing window at a scale of 5 × 8 meters. Most of Atta Kim’s works involve long production periods and immense scale, through which the spiritual energy of Eastern philosophy is expressed as a new form of photographic language marked by powerful visual intensity and abstraction.


Atta Kim, ON-AIR EIGHTHOURS New York 110-7, 2005 ©Atta Kim

In particular, this exhibition includes a monumental work from the ‘Self-Portrait series’ that took three years to produce. This work is composed by photographing one individual from each of 100 different countries and layering all 100 portraits into a single image, exhibited at a scale of 360 × 450 cm. Another work featuring Tibetan subjects, created by superimposing 100 male and 100 female figures respectively, is also presented.

Coinciding with the ICP exhibition, Atta Kim’s photography book was published by the German publisher STEIDL as a hardcover volume measuring 9 × 12 inches and comprising 165 pages. Following ‘The Museum Project’, published by the Aperture Foundation in 2004, this marks the second time his work has been published by a major international publisher. The book includes the majority of works from the ‘ON-AIR Project’ and also incorporates archival images from ‘The Museum Project’ and ‘Deconstruction’ series, allowing for a comprehensive view of Atta Kim’s artistic trajectory.

Notably, the publication features the full transcript of a four-day interview between Atta Kim and ICP curator Christopher Phillips. Through this extensive dialogue, readers are able to gain a detailed understanding of the artist’s work and philosophical approach.

Christopher Phillips, curator at ICP, commented: “While ICP’s 2005 group exhibition of contemporary Chinese photography presented the many changing surfaces of China, Atta Kim’s solo exhibition 《ATTA KIM : ON-AIR》 is a highly meaningful exhibition that introduces Eastern philosophy to New York as a new form of energy.”

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