Bahc Yiso, We Are Happy, 2004 © Busan Biennale

Among the works exhibited at the Busan Biennale, one piece in particular has drawn attention from both inside and outside the art world: the monumental installation We Are Happy (photo), mounted atop a steel tower in the outdoor exhibition space of the Busan Museum of Art. Composed of nothing more than seven white letters set against a pale orange background, this work is the final piece by Bahc Yiso (1958–2004), whose death was reported only two months after the work was conceived, deepening the sense of shock and loss felt throughout the art community.
 
Based on the project proposal the artist had submitted shortly before his death, Biennale organizers presented the work after consultations with fellow artists who had closely followed his practice. On the 15th, when the installation was carried out on site, members of the group ‘Thinking of Bahc Yiso’, including Lee Young-wook and Lee Young-chul, traveled from Seoul to attend the process. A memorial event for the artist, who passed away prematurely in April, is also planned during the Biennale period.
 
Park Man-ho, a curator of the Biennale, explained: “Last summer, the artist encountered the word ‘happiness’ in a large propaganda slogan affixed to a building in Pyongyang, shown on television. This prompted him to ask himself whether ‘we are truly happy,’ which became the basis of this work.” The project proposal was delivered to the Busan Biennale in February, just two months before his death.
 
The artist’s original specification—’white lettering on a yellow-toned background’—was refined through extensive discussion among Biennale organizers, fellow artists, and critics, and ultimately realized as a pale orange hue among various shades of yellow. Measuring 43 meters in width and 9 meters in height, We Are Happy suffered partial damage from a typhoon on the morning of the 19th, just before the opening. After restoration, the work was officially unveiled at the opening ceremony on the 21st.

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