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Seoul Media Art Biennale explores new languages to define future

Growing number of women and young artists featured at multimedia biennale

By Korea Herald

Published : Aug. 31, 2016 - 17:21

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The Seoul International Media Art Biennale is looking to make a radical bet on the future, amid a deluge of disasters and crises worldwide that have cast a grim shadow over society.

Taking place at the city-run Seoul Museum of Art since 2000, the biennale is the biggest international showcase of media art in Korea. Now in its ninth edition, this year’s event has brought together multimedia works from 61 teams of artists from over 20 countries, including Korea, the Netherlands, Japan, Brazil and South Africa.

Titled “Neriri Kiruru Harara,” the 2016 biennale borrowed words from Japanese poet Shuntaro Tanikawa’s “Two Billion Light-Years of Solitude” to explore and come to terms with the uncertainty of tomorrow. Published in 1952, the poem ponders the vastness of the universe and imagines the language shared by Martians.

“Back when (Tanikawa) wrote the poem, it was after World War II, a time when it was hard to imagine a whole other realm of existence,” explained Beck Jee-sook, artistic director of the ninth biennale, at a press conference at Seoul Museum of Art in Seoul on Wednesday. “Now in 2016, outer space is no longer unfamiliar to us. This is a time when mankind is leading the change of the entire Earth itself.”

Visitors view “Painting With History in a Room Filled With People With Funny Names 3” by Korakrit Arunanondchai at Seoul Museum of Art on Wednesday. (Yonhap) Visitors view “Painting With History in a Room Filled With People With Funny Names 3” by Korakrit Arunanondchai at Seoul Museum of Art on Wednesday. (Yonhap)

From virtual reality to drones and 3-D printing, the exhibition also emphasizes the role of advanced technology in society.

“The intention of this event is to provide new interpretations of our surrounding environments,” Beck said. “In the long run, all artists are attempting to create new languages from their perspectives.”

In addition, the biennale -- also referred to as Mediacity Seoul -- has evolved to feature more female and young artists, said Kim Hong-hee, director of SeMA.

Female artists make up approximately half of all participants, and the number of young artists in their 20s and 30s has risen by about 30 percent.

This year’s SeMA-Hana Media Art award went to co-winners Christine Sun Kim and Korakrit Arunanondchai, who received 50 million won ($44,800). The award is given to those who best embody the theme and spirit of the biennale.

Visitors view a four-part video installation on Wednesday at the ninth Seoul International Media Art Biennale taking place at Seoul Museum of Art. (Yonhap) Visitors view a four-part video installation on Wednesday at the ninth Seoul International Media Art Biennale taking place at Seoul Museum of Art. (Yonhap)

Deaf since birth, Korean-American Kim is a New York-based artist who attempts to challenge the notion of sound through installations, drawings and live performances. Arunanondchai, a 30-year-old Bangkok-raised multimedia artist, will present works containing both modern and traditional elements of Thai culture at the exhibition.

Taking place at four branches of the Seoul Museum of Art -- Seosomun Main Building, Nam-Seoul Living Arts Museum, Buk-Seoul Museum of Art and Nanji Residency -- the media art biennale will run from Sept. 1 to Nov. 20. Admission is free. For more information, visit mediacityseoul.kr.

By Kim Yu-young (ivykim@heraldcorp.com)