Un livre d'entretiens avec 47 artistes coréens de la jeune génération, offrant un aperçu kaléidoscopique du dynamisme de la scène artistique contemporaine à Séoul.
There has been a recent surge of global interest in Korean arts and popular culture, as evidenced by neologisms such as K-pop, K-drama and K-classic. Korean contemporary art has also captured the attention of a growing number of international biennales, exhibitions and fairs, attracting an international audience to Korea's local artists and the scene they comprise. This is where our questions begin: despite a growing sense of nationalism in the global political stage, through a post-postmodernist lens, national categorization appears anachronistic. Is the prefix "K" then a mere political ploy and capitalist commodity? If "K" were to be removed, on the other hand, how else might we attempt at providing a portrait of the changing currents in Korea's art scene? Is collective categorization or generalization ever worthwhile, and if so, to what extent can it be done without reducing or marginalizing individuals?
With these questions in mind, the three authors of K-Artists have carefully selected a roster of emerging artists who are active participants in the community to provide a snapshot of Seoul's current art scene. This fully-illustrated publication is in an interview format that preserves each artist's distinct voice and evolving practices as much as possible. K-Artists also includes a foreword by curator and writer Hyunjin Kim which traces and critically assesses the becoming of Seoul's art scene.
Edité par Gye Taek Gon (James Gui).
Textes de Hyunjoo Byeon, Diana Eunjee Kim, Hyukgue Kwon.
Préface de Hyunjin Kim.
Entretiens avec Sooryeon Choe, Eugene Jung, Jihyun Jung, Bangjoo Kim, Minha Park, Sungsil Ryu, Young-jun Tak, et al.