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Korea Artist Prize 2020

  • 2020-12-04 ~ 2021-04-04
  • Seoul Gallery 2,3,4

Exhibition Overview

Korea Artist Prize 2020

Since 2012, the Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (MMCA) and SBS Cultural Foundation have co-sponsored the annual Korea Artist Prize, providing support to outstanding visual artists who are using innovative aesthetics to address the most compelling social issues of our time. Each year, four artists/teams are awarded funding for their artistic productions, which are then exhibited at MMCA. Now in its ninth year, the Korea Artist Prize has assumed a leading role in promoting new discourse and direction in Korean art, and thus continues to garnering more attention and acclaim with each passing year.


At the end of 2019, four finalists were chosen for the Korea Artist Prize 2020: Kim Minae, Lee Seulgi, Jung Yoonsuk, and Chung Heeseung. These four artists were selected for sponsorship after being recommended and screened by a panel of curators and other art experts, both domestic and international. Known for twisting the familiar structures of life in her sculptures and installations, Kim Minae presents a new work that uses the physical space of the museum to raise doubts about the conventional conditions of art and exhibitions. Based in France since the 1990s, Lee Seulgi produces sculptures, installations, and videos with an emphasis on formal aesthetics. In her new installation, Lee incorporates elements of traditional architecture and folk art to transform the exhibition space. While both Kim Minae and Lee Seulgi utilize formal aesthetics to transform our recognition and experience of the museum's space, Jung Yoonsuk and Chung Heeseung provide the opportunity and conditions for deep contemplation on life and humanity. In his video installation, artist and film director Jung Yoonsuk explores "what humanity is" today through the stories and choices of individuals responding to our changing times. Finally, Chung Heeseung combines her primary media of photography with text and music in a dual installation that infuses the exhibition space with the concerns of life and art that she shares with fellow artists.


Based in France, Lee Seulgi continuously explores her interest in ordinary objects, everyday language, and natural forms through sculptures and installations with an emphasis on formal aesthetics. She especially enjoys being inspired by folk traditions and collaborating with master artisans of folk crafts, such as Korean quilters in Tongyeong and traditional basket weavers in Mexico.
For this exhibition, Lee presents her new work DONG DONG DARI GORI , in which she transforms the exhibition space using traditional Korean windows. Visitors are greeted at the door by the moon, which filled Korean traditional homes with magic whenever it passed by the wooden frames of paper doors and windows. Hanging in the space are glass containers holding water from different rivers around the world, sent by the artist's friends who are saddened and frustrated by their inability to meet due to COVID-19. A playful spirit is aroused through the addition of Korean folk songs and traditional French games. Made in collaboration with an architect and experts in traditional wooden frames and glass, this work exemplifies Lee's prolonged contemplation on the captivating forms of human-made objects, which reveal the mysteries of the fundamental relationship between people and nature.


Kim Minae has produced sculptures to reveal the inherent contradictions faced by individuals within a society and site-specific installations that intervene with the architectural space to distort conventional frames or social structures that we often take for granted. Her works raise compelling questions about the meaning and consummation of art, particularly within the specific physical space and institutional environment of a museum or gallery.
For her new installation 1.안녕하세요 2. Hello, Kim highlights the unique architectural structure of Gallery 2 with a collection of sculptures and structures that arbitrarily cooperate with or confront one another, interacting like a chain reaction to produce an absurd situational play. "Overlooked" spaces, which often go unnoticed despite their physical presence, are shifted to the forefront to play a leading role in the work. As they respond to such spaces, the sculptures arouse elements from Kim's past exhibitions, which thus serve as a type of historical reference. Eliminating all boundaries between the space and the structures, Kim forces us to question whether a sculpture can exist apart from its environment, thus extending her inquiry into the fundamental nature of sculpture and art.


Working primarily with photography, Chung Heeseung explores the possibilities and limitations that arise through the process of turning objects into imagery. Working with objects, bodies, and spaces, she seeks to maximize the raw materiality and presence of the medium, while also using text to divulge the inherent flaws of communication tools such as image and language.
For this exhibition, Chung Heeseung uses her own communications with colleagues to transmit her thoughts and concerns about life as an artist, while also exploring the process of communication itself. Separate in form but united in content, Dancing Together on a Sinking Ship (photography) and Poetry for Alcoholics and Angels (text) function as a single installation. Chung's diverse interactions with twenty-four fellow artists are transformed into portrait photographs, images of objects from the artists' daily lives, and short fragments of conversations that she had with them while producing this work. Further enhanced with music, this concrete yet ambiguous collection of images and text conveys the powerful fear and devotion of those who choose life as an artist, while reminding us that art is just as absurd and impermanent as life.


Working as a visual artist and film director, Jung Yoonsuk specializes in documentary films that delve into the hidden side of specific social events in order to explore the relationship between the individual and the state and to reveal the ambivalence of human existence. In Non-Fiction Diary (2013), for example, he examined the 1990s murders committed by the Jijonpa gang, while Bamseom Pirates, Seoul Inferno (2016) chronicled the lives and activities of the eponymous punk rock band.
Jung Yoonsuk presents Tomorrow, which combines a feature film with photography and video installations. Forming the main axis of the exhibition, the film Tomorrow is a documentary about people who produce, consume, or use surrogate human forms. The first half of the film takes place in a factory in China that produces sex dolls, while the second half travels to Japan to tell the stories of Senji Nakajima, who lives with several sex dolls, and Michihito Matsuda, who promotes the use of A.I. robots as a political alternative. Although both Senji and Matsuda were initially driven by their disappointment and distrust in people, their methods of resolution could not have been more different. Revealing the grotesque landscape of the present and the possible future, the film uses the lives and choices of individuals to question "what humanity is" in this era of rapid change.

  • Period
    2020-12-04 ~ 2021-04-04
  • Organized by/Supported by
    MMCA, SBS Cultural Foundation
  • Venue
    Seoul Gallery 2,3,4
  • Admission
    Free
  • Artist
    KIM Minae, LEE Seulgi, JUNG Yoonsuk, CHUNG Heeseung
  • Numbers of artworks