The Artist © Haegue Yang

Haegue Yang (39), widely known as the artist representing the Korean Pavilion at the 2009 Venice Biennale, has had her work Sallim acquired by the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York.
 
This marks the third time a Korean artist’s work has entered MoMA’s collection, following the late Nam June Paik and artist Jung Yeondoo. On the 10th, MoMA finalized its decision to purchase Yang’s work for 100 million KRW (approximately USD 100,000).
 
Sallim, now part of MoMA’s collection, is a conceptual sculpture based on the kitchen of the artist’s Berlin home, where she currently resides. The work consists of a steel framework constructed to match the exact dimensions of her kitchen, within which Yang integrates everyday household items and appliances alongside handcrafted objects such as knitted pieces, thereby revealing an intimate domestic space. The work was first presented at the Korean Pavilion of the Venice Biennale last year.
 
Yang explained, “The term ‘Sallim,’ which refers to the act of managing a household or a domestic space such as a kitchen, feels to me like a kind of microcosm—an especially compelling space where I, as well as my work, form a relationship with the outside world.”
 
Currently, Doo-Ryun Chung, a Korean curator, is working at MoMA as an associate curator in the Department of Painting and Sculpture.
 
Prior to joining MoMA, Chung organized the exhibition 《Brave New Worlds》 at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis in 2007, where she invited Haegue Yang. This marked the first introduction of Yang’s work to the United States.


Haegue Yang, Sallim, 2009 © Haegue Yang

MoMA’s acquisition of the work was also made possible with Chung’s support. Actively working abroad, Haegue Yang first held a solo exhibition titled 《Sadong 30》 in 2006 in a vacant house in Sadong, on the outskirts of Incheon. The exhibition, in which she installed conceptual sculptural works throughout her grandmother’s former home, created a significant impact on the Korean art scene.
 
This autumn, Yang is scheduled to reconnect with Korean audiences through a solo exhibition at Art Sonje Center in Sogyeok-dong, Seoul. On the 16th, she was also named the recipient of the 21st Kim Se-Choong Young Sculptor Award.

References