Joo Yongseong, ‘Red Seeds‘ series ©Joo Yongseong

At a time when documentary photography appears to be steadily losing its footing, today may in fact be the era in which documentary photography is most urgently needed. Amid the flood of digital video media and formats that merely provoke fleeting curiosity or deliver simple information, it is difficult to elicit the resonance and insight of documentary photography—works in which photographers engage deeply and persistently with their subjects through distinct critical perspectives.

This is precisely why, in 2024, the quarterly documentary photography magazine 〈ReFrame〉 is launched, its name carrying the meaning of “re-establishing” or “reconstructing.” Founded by a photojournalist working between Seoul and New York (Publisher and Editor: Shin Woongjae), 《ReFrame》 centers on the documentary photography practices of photographers who have documented social, political, economic, historical, and environmental issues both in Korea and internationally. True to its name, the magazine aims to reconfigure the status of documentary photography within today’s media landscape and to offer new perspectives that expand the horizons of consciousness for contemporary audiences through documentary photography.


Joo Yongseong, ‘Red Seeds‘ series ©Joo Yongseong

In pursuit of a longer rhythm distinct from ephemeral media, 〈ReFrame〉 takes the form of a printed quarterly magazine. Measuring 190 × 257 mm and comprising 112 pages, it may appear modest in scale, yet considering the subjects, content, and discursive reflections embedded in the documentary photographs it contains, the breadth and depth of this small volume are not easily measured.

The inaugural issue, the Winter 2024 edition of 〈ReFrame〉, is composed of works by documentary photographers who have long and consistently engaged in recording the wounds of history. Lee Jaegap’s documentation of forced labor under Japanese colonial rule, Wildflowers Blooming over Wounds; Kim Heunggu’s record of the Jeju April 3 Incident, Teumeong; and Joo Yongseong’s documentation of civilian massacre victims during the Korean War, Red Seeds, all address painful histories that run through Korea’s modern and contemporary past.

Positioned between the visual languages of these three photographers are two discursive texts: Discourse I, titled “Where, What, and Why Documentary Photographers Work,” by photographer Choi Dawoon, and Discourse II, titled “For the Old, the New, and the Present Documentary,” by photographer Chae Seungwoo.

The photography exhibition 《ReFrame》, opening on December 17, is a curated exhibition celebrating and publicizing the launch of the new quarterly documentary photography magazine. At the exhibition venue, visitors can encounter the newly published inaugural issue alongside original prints of the photographs featured in the magazine, presented in exhibition form.

On December 19 (Thu) at 6:00 PM, a “Meet the Artists” event will be held with all five photographers who contributed photographs and texts to the inaugural issue, along with editor Shin Woongjae.

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