Kyungah Ham (b. 1966) is an artist who persistently delves into the gaps of contradictions and absurdities, challenging the rules and taboos of hidden systems behind reality. She has addressed these invisible social structures and phenomena through various mediums, including painting, installation, video, performance, and embroidery.
 
Ham's work traverses both within and beyond the realm of art, actively communicating with others across unreachable borders or by traveling around the world. Her work manifests as a condensed form of such labor-intensive expressions and the uncontrollable variables of the process.

Kyungah Ham, Chasing Yellow, 2000-2001 ©MMCA

From 2000 to 2001, the artist traveled to Asian countries including South Korea, Japan, China, and Vietnam, creating a documentary-style video work titled Chasing Yellow, in which she followed people wearing yellow clothing and interviewed them. The work consists of eight channels, each featuring interviews that capture the lives of eight different individuals.
 
According to the artist, yellow in this work represents 'a promise to start a relationship.' By connecting the diverse personal lives of the individuals through the common element of the color yellow, the artist reveals the cultural, institutional, and religious implications embedded within.

Kyungah Ham, Odessa Stairs, 2007 ©Gyeonggi Museum of Modern Art

On the other hand, Odessa Stairs (2007) is a work composed of discarded furniture and materials from the renovation of the house of a former president, who was the last leader of the military dictatorship. This massive staircase, which resembles an altar, is strewn with miscellaneous items from the dictator's home, including a bidet, chairs, golf shoes, carpets, loudspeakers, tiles, and a shopping cart.

Battleship Potemkin Poster ©Battleship Potemkin

The title ‘Odessa Stairs’ refers to the location of the massacre scene during the Russian Revolution in Sergei M. Eisenstein's film Battleship Potemkin (1925). Through this work, the historical fact of the suppression of the democratization movement in Korea is compared to the political repression depicted in the film. Just as Battleship Potemkin used montage techniques to address political narratives, Kyungah Ham's Odessa Stairs combines various items to edit and present the private domain of the former president alongside the tragic history of Korean politics.

Kyungah Ham, Museum Display, 2000-2010 ©Art Sonje Center

From 2000 to 2010, Kyungah Ham worked on Museum Display, a project that addresses the plunder and violence perpetrated by past powerful entities, which have been tacitly accepted and ignored, hidden under the guise of 'art' through museums. Museum Display adopts the exhibition format of a museum, treating the display cases themselves as both a museum and a representation of it.

Kyungah Ham, Museum Display, 2000-2010 ©Art Sonje Center

Kyungah Ham stole items such as teacups, plates, and spoons from museum cafes and shops, and over ten years, she amassed a large collection of stolen goods, which she displayed in a manner resembling a museum exhibit. Through this, she critiques the inherent power and human desire for materialism present in traditional museums.
 
Each item is labeled with the date and place of the theft, openly confessing her actions in contrast to the usual practices of museums. Museum Display thus reenacts the looting of the imperialist era as a contemporary crime, bringing it into the present and strategically revealing the realities and hidden aspects of cultural imperialism.

Installation view of “Kyungah Ham: Phantom Footsteps” ©Kukje Gallery

Kyungah Ham's representative work, the ‘Embroidery Project,’ began in 2008 when she found North Korean propaganda leaflets in front of her house. Inspired by this, the artist created her own leaflets to communicate with North Korean residents, despite the ban on civilian exchanges. She designed embroidery patterns using texts and images related to war and terrorism found online, along with excerpts of pop song lyrics and short greetings, and sent them to embroidery craftsman from North Korean through a broker in China.

Needling Whisper, Needle Country / SMS Series in Camouflage / At First, it is the dark 01-001, 2013-2015,
North Korean hand embroidery, silk threads on cotton, middle man, anxiety, censorship, bribe, wooden frame, approx.,
1200hrs/ 2persons, 198 x 138 cm

Despite numerous unpredictable challenges and risks, the patterns were delivered to the North Korean embroidery craftsman, who then crafted large-scale embroideries, and were transformed into artworks by the artist. Behind the artistic aura of the vibrant colors and aesthetic completion of these large-scale embroideries lies the condensation of valuable materials, labor, time, and a tumultuous process.
 
In her 2015 solo exhibition “Phantom Footsteps” at Kukje Gallery, Ham presented the ‘Chandelier’ series, where she displayed the reverse side of the embroideries, revealing the hidden presence of North Korean workers, the collaboration process with them, and the reality of the division. As suggested by the subtitle, ‘What You See Is the Unseen,' these highly intricate and meticulous embroideries confront us with the traces of unseen beings and realities disconnected from our own.

Kyungah Ham, Soccer Painting by the Soccer Ball Bouncing Over Crocodile River, 2016 ©MMCA
Kyungah Ham, Soccer Painting by the Soccer Ball Bouncing Over Crocodile River, 2016 ©MMCA

At the “Korea Artist Prize 2016” exhibition at the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art Korea, Kyungah Ham showcased works centered on the theme of 'defecting and settling' in collaboration with North Korean defectors. For instance, the artist supported the costs of defection and documented the arduous journeys of North Korean defectors. She also engaged a young defector who dreams of becoming a national soccer player as a performer.
 
Among these works, Soccer Painting by the Soccer Ball Bouncing Over Crocodile River captures the traces of a performance where the boy, who crossed the Crocodile River on the Vietnam-Cambodia border during his defection, dribbled a paint-drenched soccer ball freely in a mini soccer field set up in the exhibition space.

Kyungah Ham, Soccer Painting by the Soccer Ball Bouncing Over Crocodile River, 2016 ©MMCA

Next to this, soccer shoes engraved with quotes from the boy's words and an interview video detailing his defection journey are displayed. The boy's dreams, pursued despite the risk of death, along with the artist's artistic commitment, are woven into vibrant colors and abstract forms on the floor and walls of the exhibition space.
 
Kyungah Ham stated, ”Art and the artist's role are to reveal what exists but do not exist.” According to the artist, this act is a journey of chasing 'phantom footsteps.' Under the shadow of immense power, all beings, such as North Korean laborers and defectors, exist like invisible ghosts, and the artist's work involves following their footsteps, finding them, and communicating with them.

“I often refer to the terms "library and laboratory" as the practical approach to my work. Literally, the library is a place where everything—history, culture, humanity, and systems—are compiled, and in a broader and fundamental sense, the library is the world we live in. Events observed here are thrown back by the artist, the alchemist, into the field of experimentation.
 
My interest lies in questioning and doubting the relationship between personal experiences in this expansive sense of the library and how those experiences might not be just personal incidents.'” (Jongho Kim, Ryu Han Seung, ‘Kyungah Ham,’ Young Korean Artists 45: Interviews, Da Vinci Gift, 2006, p. 245)

Artist Kyungah Ham ©Kukje Gallery

Born in 1966, Kyungah Ham received a bachelor's degree at the Seoul National University with a major in painting, later also earning a Master's at the The School of Visual Arts New York City (SVA NYC). Of her major solo exhibitions early in her career are “Desire & Anesthesia” (Art Sonje Center, Seoul, 2009), “Such Game” (Ssamzie Space, Seoul, 2008), and “Room with a View” (Alternative Space LOOP, Seoul, 1999).
 
Recently, Ham participated in exhibitions such as “The Shape of Time: Korean Art after 1989” (Philadelphia Museum of Art, 2023, Minneapolis Institute of Art, 2024); “Hallyu! The Korean Wave” (Victoria and Albert Museum, London, 2023, The Museum of Fine Art, Boston, 2024, The San Francisco Asian Art Museum, 2025); and “Active Threads” (KAI10/ Arthena Foundation, Düsseldorf, 2021).
 
She has also participated in many projects, including “Korea Artist Prize 2016” (National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art Korea, Seoul, 2016), the 1st Asia Society Triennial (Asia Society Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, New York, 2020); the 10th Taipei Biennale (Taipei National Museum of Art, 2016); and the 5th Guangzhou Triennial (Guangdong Museum of Art, Guangzhou, 2015).

References