Yeesookyung, Translated Vase ©Yeesookyung

Contemporary artists Yeesookyung (54) and Sung Hwan Kim (42) have been invited to participate in the main exhibition of the world’s most prestigious art event, the Venice Biennale.

The Venice Biennale Foundation announced on its website on the 14th the list of 120 participating artists (individuals or teams) for the 57th Venice Biennale main exhibition, which will open on May 13 under the theme "Viva Arte Viva" (Long Live Art). Among them, Yeesookyung and Sung Hwan Kim were listed as Korean participants.

Yeesookyung, a graduate of the Department of Western Painting at Seoul National University, is renowned for her series Translated Vase, in which she pieces together fragments of broken ceramics to create new forms. Her production method is characterized by combining traditional materials with a contemporary interpretation, using discarded fragments of celadon and white porcelain, and reconnecting the cracks with gold. She also produces works such as her "Flame Drawing" series, using cinnabar pigment traditionally employed in Buddhist paintings and talismans, her healing-oriented "Daily Drawing" series, and recent works incorporating 3D printing technology. Yeesookyung has participated in events such as the Sydney Biennale and the "Transfear Project," an exchange program organized by the state government of North Rhine-Westphalia in Germany, and she won the "Artist of the Year" award from the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art Korea in 2012.

Sung Hwan Kim, who initially studied architecture at Seoul National University before studying both mathematics and fine art at Williams College in the United States, gained attention with the opening exhibition of "The Tanks," a new space unveiled in July 2012 at Tate Modern, UK, converted from former underground oil tanks. His video work Temper Clay, presented at the time, reinterprets Shakespeare's King Lear within the context of modern Korean history, cleverly transforming conflicts over property distribution into an exploration of Korean disciplinary culture. In 2014, he held a solo exhibition at Art Sonje Center in Seoul, and last year, his work was featured in a group exhibition at Arko Art Center as part of a residency exchange exhibition organized by the Rijksakademie in the Netherlands. He is known as an artist who built his reputation in Europe before becoming widely recognized in Korea, and he is currently based in New York.

The Venice Biennale, a biennial art festival with a 120-year history that began in 1895 to commemorate the silver wedding anniversary of the Italian royal couple, will be held this year under the direction of Christine Macel, senior curator at the Centre Pompidou in France, running until November 26. In addition to the main exhibition, national pavilion exhibitions will also take place, with Cody Choi and Wan Lee selected as the artists representing the Korean Pavilion, which has been in operation since 1995.

Meanwhile, it has been six years since Korean artists last participated in the Venice Biennale main exhibition, following the inclusion of Jungah Koo and Haegue Yang in 2009. In 2015, three Korean artists—Ayoung Kim, Hwayeon Nahm, and Heung Soon Im—were included in the main exhibition, with Heung Soon Im receiving considerable attention by unexpectedly winning the Silver Lion Award for his video work Factory Complex.

References