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지나쌤

New art center in Seoul promotes contemporary art

Taejin International of accessory brand Louis Quatorze opens museum dedicated to contemporary art

By KH디지털2

Published : May 11, 2016 - 17:44

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A new art center dedicated to showcasing contemporary art and fostering young artists opened Thursday in Sinsa-dong, Seoul.

To mark the opening, the Platform-L Contemporary Art Center, founded by Taejin International -- which manufactures and sells leather goods under the brand Louis Quatorze -- is holding two exhibitions that show multimedia works of Korean artist Bae Young-whan and Chinese artist Yang Fudong. 

Platform-L Contemporary Art Center in Eonju-ro, Gangnam-gu, Seoul (Platform-L Contemporary Art Center) Platform-L Contemporary Art Center in Eonju-ro, Gangnam-gu, Seoul (Platform-L Contemporary Art Center)

“We aim to make the space one that offers a lot of opportunities for young artists -- whether they are designers, architects, curators or art critics. Anyone engaged with contemporary art forms can share and evaluate many ideas here,” said Park Manu, director of the art center, at a press preview Tuesday.

According to Park, Taejin International has been an art patron for a decade, sponsoring a number of arts projects, including the 2014 National Museum of Korea exhibition of masterpieces from the Musee d’Orsay in Paris and the Seoul screenings of “Factory Complex” by Korean filmmaker Im Heung-soon which won the Silver Lion at the Venice Biennale in 2015. 

“Abstract Verb -- Can You Remember?” by Bae Young-whan (Platform-L Contemporary Art Center) “Abstract Verb -- Can You Remember?” by Bae Young-whan (Platform-L Contemporary Art Center)

The new seven-story building, designed by architect Lee Jeong-hoon of Joho Architecture, is a space for multidisciplinary art -- visual art displays, film, performance, theater, music and dance. The center features exhibition space, a lecture room for public programs and seminars and a versatile live hall that can showcase films and dance performances.

The exhibitions celebrating the opening are solo shows of Bae and Yang who explore contemporary lives and people through photography, video and sound.

Bae, whose works have been featured at the Venice Biennale in 2005 and the Sharjah Biennale in 2013 and other international exhibitions, features birds as self-portraits of people living in contemporary society in his sculptures and videos. On show at the Platform-L Contemporary Art Center is a sculpture of a blindfolded parrot emitting sounds of world news broadcast through speakers as if they were the sound of the parrot’s singing. 

“Speech, Thought, Meaning” by Bae Young-whan (Platform-L Contemporary Art Center) “Speech, Thought, Meaning” by Bae Young-whan (Platform-L Contemporary Art Center)

In a four-channel video installation, a dancer wearing a feather costume dances along to drum beats that makes the dance look like a primitive movement, or a street dance, depending on the viewer’s perspective.

“I wondered whether we are living in a time when we just can’t fly, or suppress our desire to fly,” said Bae, during the press preview. “The desire to fly is represented through the birds in the exhibition.”

Shanghai-based artist-filmmaker Yang Fudong showcases a five-channel video installation that screens his new film “The Colored Sky: New Women II.” The work portrays the desires of young women aspiring to become movie stars as a metaphor for a sentiment that was prevalent in China under the influence of Western culture in the early 1900s.

A scene from “The Colored Sky: New Women II” by Yang Fudong (Platform-L Contemporary Art Center) A scene from “The Colored Sky: New Women II” by Yang Fudong (Platform-L Contemporary Art Center)

“I imagined a picture where a young girl longs for a distant future,” said Yang, who shot the film against artificial settings of a beach, desert and hills.

The art center will hold four to five exhibitions annually and collect commissioned artworks.

“The direction of the art center lies in the long-running process of the work we do with young artists. We hope this place will become a creation center that allows artists and curators to produce creative works and projects,” said Park.

By Lee Woo-young (wylee@heraldcorp.com)