Exhibitions
《Prelude: With a Heart Singing Stars》, 2025.03.20 – 2025.11.23, Seoul Museum of Art
March 20, 2025
Seoul Museum of Art

Installation
view of 《Prelude: With a Heart Singing Stars》 © SeMA
The Seoul Museum of Art presents
a special exhibition to commemorate the 80th anniversary of Korea’s liberation, featuring major works from its
collection and the GanaArt Collection that reflect the social and cultural
atmosphere of Korea before and after liberation. The GanaArt Collection
consists of 200 artworks donated by Lee Ho-jae, the Chairman of GanaArt, in
2001. The donation consists of Minjung Art and realist art that
passionately portray aspects of 1980s and 1990s Korean society.
With 80 years having passed since Korea’s liberation, the generation that experienced Japanese colonial
rule, liberation, the Korean War, and national division firsthand has given
way to the next generation that did not. 95 percent of today’s Korean population born post-liberation has only learned about the
series of monumental events that took place before and after liberation as
historical facts through extant records. Through the works in the GanaArt
Collection, this exhibition seeks to allow viewers to empathize more deeply
with past circumstances by providing social, political, and historical contexts
and introducing personal narratives that have remained on the periphery of the
grand discourse of Korean modern and contemporary history.
The exhibition is composed of four parts. Part 1 thematizes Japanese colonial
rule and the independence movement, examining the history of pain and
sacrifice. Part 2 deals with the horrors of the Korean War as a tragic
fratricide. Part 3 reflects on the detriments of national division and social
and political issues in postwar Korea. Part 4 explores the future possibilities
through works that envision peaceful coexistence beyond war and
conflicts.

Installation
view of 《Prelude: With a Heart Singing Stars》 © SeMA
Artworks in this exhibition are
presented alongside poems capturing the 1940s and 1950s spirit of resistance
and recovery to vividly convey the resonance of the times. Faithfully harboring
the yearning for liberation, the harrowing shadow of war that comes from death,
and the pain of national division and ideological conflict, the poems offer an
indirect experience of how Korean people persevered through the dark times.
‘The February 8 Declaration of Independence’ written by Korean students in
Tokyo in 1919 reads, “The Korean
people have maintained a sophisticated culture and the experience of a national
life for almost 5,000 years. At the same time, the harms and unhappiness
resulting from many years of autocracy have led Korean people to today’s reality. Yet we trust the Korean people, who have loved and
favored justice and peace since its establishment, will be able to contribute
to peace in the world and its culture of humanity, once we can found a new
country, modelled after advanced nations and on the foundation of democracy
based on justice and freedom.”
The freedom, Koreans take for granted today is indebted to the sacrifices of
our previous generation. The liberty they achieved through their dedication and
courage is a precious legacy that we must pass on to future generations. This
exhibition commemorating the 80th anniversary of national liberation will
hopefully serve as an opportunity to reflect on the value of freedom and a
prelude that hold a future of peace and reconciliation.