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The Future Is Now

  • 2015-08-29 ~ 2015-11-29
  • Foreign Country La Friche Belle de Mai

Exhibition Overview

The Future Is Now
Bang & Lee_installation view in Marseille
Bang & Lee_installation view in Marseille
JEONG Jeong-Ju_Installation view in Marseille
JEONG Jeong-Ju_Installation view in Marseille
Kim BumSoo_installation view in Marseille
Kim BumSoo_installation view in Marseille
Kim Ki-chul_installaton view in Marseille
Kim Ki-chul_installaton view in Marseille
KIm SounGui_ Opening Performance view in Marseiile
KIm SounGui_ Opening Performance view in Marseiile
The Future is Now_ Installation view in Marseille
The Future is Now_ Installation view in Marseille
The Future is Now_ Installation view in Marseille
The Future is Now_ Installation view in Marseille
The Future is Now_ Installation view in Marseille
The Future is Now_ Installation view in Marseille

The Future Is Now, a media art exhibit from Seoul’s National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (MMCA), opened at La Friche Belle de Mai, a cultural complex in Marseille, on Aug. 29.

To mark the years 2015-2016, the official year of Korea-France Bilateral Exchanges, the exhibit features 41 works of media art by 33 teams of Korean artists. The exhibition continues until Nov. 29.

Im Heung-soon, who won the Silver Lion for promising young artists at the 56th International Art Exhibition in Venice, is showing his work of art “Momento.” It consists of two screens: one plays a video containing a series of photographs of Im’s parents; the other narrates scenes from his family who gathered in a studio to take family photographs.

Moon Kyungwon and Jeon Joonho, who represented the Korea Pavilion at the 56th International Art Exhibition in Venice, are showing “End of the World,” or “El Fin del Mundo.” In their work, Moon and Jeon portray an artist who continues to work on his art pieces even though the world approaches its end, exploring the meaning of art.

Lim Minouk has introduced “The Weights of Hands,” a road trip movie in which the artist captures video images of a group of people visiting the sites of the Four Major Rivers Restoration Project, a Korean green initiative, a series of abandoned docks and some apartment complexes, all as if they were on a pilgrimage.

Kim Kichul created “Sound-looking Rain,” a work in which he recorded the sound of rain falling at the Jongmyo Shrine, a UNESCO World Heritage site in Seoul. A team called Everyware created a media art work titled “Memoirs,” a fusion of emotion and technology.

Ahn Sekwon, Lee Ki-il and Park Junebum created different video art works that feature their own perspectives on Korean society. Oh Yong-seok and An Jungju came up with video and installation art works that portray history and wars happening all around the world that they tried to analyze from a social and cultural point of view.

Kim Soun-gui, who has introduced Korean video art and performances in France before, shows her early video work, “Molding Conditions.” On the beaches of Nice and Monaco, Kim gave people colorful pieces of fabric and used them to make kites. Then, Kim taped the image of people flying the kites to create her video work. Kim also performed together with Lucien Bertolina, a French trombonist and composer, during the opening ceremony.

  • Artist
    33 teams of Korean artists
  • Numbers of artworks
    41