Exhibitions
《The 19th SongEun Art Award》, 2019.12.21 – 2020.02.15, SongEun
January 02, 2020
SongEun
Installation view of 《The 19th SongEun Art Award》 © SongEun
The SongEun Art and Cultural Foundation presents 《The 19th SongEun Art Award》. Established in 2001 to support emerging Korean artists, the SongEun Art Award selected approximately ten recipients annually from 2001 to 2010, and since 2011 has selected four recipients each year (one Grand Prize winner and three Excellence Award winners).
A total of 260 applicants applied this year, and following an online portfolio review, 29 artists were selected for further evaluation based on one additional submitted new work. Ultimately, four artists—Kwak Eve, Kwon Hyewon, Lee Eunsil, and Cha Ji-liang—were selected as the final recipients of the SongEun Art Award.

Installation view of 《The 19th SongEun Art Award》 © SongEun
First, Kwak Eve reorganizes fragments of reality—urban environments, architecture, and human presence—into sculptural and installation works. Her new piece Between Small and Large experiments with scale while visualizing a scene from everyday life. Using materials such as polycarbonate and iso pink, combined with digital painting and murals applied to museum walls, windows, and ceilings, she constructs worlds of varying dimensions.
Kwon Hyewon presents video works that introduce specific events or memorable places. In Landscape of Ghosts and Monsters, various narratives unfold around a cave, where tree roots, hidden figures, bats, and vapor intertwine to create a dreamlike atmosphere. In Kindly, More Kindly, she explores the relationship between the history of nature and human history through elements such as lava, mold, and the earth, presenting moving images of varying scales through irregular frames and projection mapping.

Installation view of 《The 19th SongEun Art Award》 © SongEun
Lee Eunsil examines innate human desire and its underlying aspects through traditional techniques and materials of Korean painting. She questions what distorts desire into something socially taboo and whether such impulses are, in fact, natural. Her large-scale work Concealed Ovulation, approximately 5 meters in vertical length, is installed across the mezzanine levels on the second and third floors of the exhibition space. By opening and closing the sliding door placed in front of the work, viewers experience a sensation akin to secretly peering into someone’s concealed desires.
Cha Ji-liang presents Only Those Who Are Leaving See Everything, a work centered on the theme of leaving one’s hometown. A roughly 60-minute video in the form of a letter is played on a television, while a slideshow of time-related images repeats on a mobile phone placed in the same exhibition space. On a laptop placed on a table, his previous work Strike, Synchronization is silently played.
The Grand Prize winner among the four artists will be announced in January. The selected artist will receive a prize of 20 million KRW and support for a future solo exhibition, while each of the three Excellence Award winners will receive 20 million KRW. The exhibition of the award recipients will be held at SongEun Art Space until February 15, 2020.