Posts Tagged ‘Asian artists’
Posted by artradar on August 25, 2010
KOREA ART EXHIBITIONS BIENNALES ART EVENTS EMERGING ARTISTS
The Busan Biennale 2010 will be held from 11 September until 20 November at several locations in Busan, including the Busan Museum of Art, as well as at the nearby Yachting Center and Gwangalli Beach, under the theme of ‘Living in Evolution’.
The Biennale’s website describes the theme as such:

The official 2010 Busan Biennale poster, designed by Lee Pooroni and based on the theme ‘Living in Evolution’.
We are living individual lives. Yet at the same time, we are living in the processes of evolution. Evolution will continue. But no one knows the direction of this evolution.
This exhibition will try to think through the relations between art, society, world, history and the future by considering the dual time axes in which we are living today.
Featuring 161 works from 72 artists, the art festival will make a new attempt of integrating three existing exhibitions – “Contemporary Art Exhibition”, “Sea Art Festival” and “Busan Sculpture Project” – into one.
The Busan Biennale has been held every two years since the beginning of 2000. This year’s biennale makes an attempt at new discoveries and insights on relations between individuals and mankind, past and future and arts and society.

Kiichiro Adachi, 'Antigravity device', 2009, tulip, soil, neodymium magnet, stainless steel, halogen light.
In an unusual move, the 2010 Busan Biennale will have one single director, Azumaya Takashi, planning for all exhibitions. As an independent curator hailed for his experimental approach to exhibitions, Azumaya has held curatorial posts at the Setagaya Art Museum and the Mori Art Museum in Tokyo. He was commissioner of the 2002 Media City Seoul and guest curator for the 2008 Busan Biennale.
The art festival aims to help forge a closer link between the public and contemporary art through creating connections between the featured works and exhibition venues. Large-scale installations will be placed at several key spots in the city to serve as landmarks, depicting the exhibition theme and symbolising civilisations.
Along with the main exhibition, directed by Azumaya, the 2010 Busan Biennale will be composed of special exhibitions such as “Now, Asian Art” and joint exhibitions such as “Gallery Festival” and “Exhibition at alternative spaces”.
Featuring young and experimental artists from Korea, China and Japan,”Now, Asian Art” aims to tighten regional networks in Asia and strengthen contemporary Asian art. “Gallery Festival” is a set of special exhibitions presented by local art galleries, again featuring artists from Korea, China and Japan.
Educational programs, including a contemporary art course called “Art Story”, will be available. The course is scheduled to open in October and targets adult art lovers and aspiring artists. In addition, a conference of art editors in Asia will be held on September 12 under the title of the “Asian Editors’ Conference”.
Asian artists participating in the 2010 Busan Biennale include:

Donghee Koo, 'Souvenir', 2008, wood, light fixture, mirror, and artificial plant.
Korea
Min-Kyu KANG
Tae Hun KANG
Donghee KOO
Dalsul KWON
Eunju KIM
Jung-Myung KIM
Shinjung RYU
Bal Loon PARK
Sung Tae PARK
SATA
Moo-kyoung SHIN
Sangho SHIN
Dayeon WON
Kibong RHEE
Byungho LEE
SongJoon LEE
Young Sun LIM
Seung JUNG
Jinyun CHEONG
Hye Ryun JUNG
Jung Moo CHO
Ki-Youl CHA
Bongho HA

Thaweesak Srithongdee, 'Zoo', 2009, acrylic on canvas.
Japan
Kohei NAWA
Saburo MURAOKA
Kiichiro ADACHI
Kenji YANOBE
Miki JO
Akira KANAYAMA
Tomoko KONOIKE
Kosei KOMATSU
China
MadeIn
Shun YUAN
Anxiong QIU
Thailand
Imhathai SUWATTANASILP
Thaweesak SRITHONGDEE
Turkey
Emre HÜNER
Inci EVINER
UK, Israel
Yishay GARBASZ
Zadok BEN-DAVID
Mongolia
Amarsaikhan NAMSRAIJAV
Vietnam
Dinh Q. LÊ
Philippines
Christina DY
Taiwan
Shih Chieh HUANG
Egypt
Doa ALY
VL/KN
Related Topics: Korean venues, biennales, emerging artists, promoting art
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Posted in Asian, Biennales, Chinese, Egyptian, Events, Israeli, Japanese, Korea, Korean, Lists, Mongolian, Promoting art, Taiwanese, Thai, Turkish, Venues, Vietnamese | Tagged: Akira Kanayama, Amarsaikhan Namsraijav, Anxiong Qiu, art events, Asian art, Asian artists, Azumaya Takashi, Bal Loon Park, biennale, Bongho Ha, Busan Biennale, Busan Museum of Art, Byungho Lee, Christina Dy, contemporary Asian art, Dalsul Kwon, Dao Aly, Dayeon Won, Dinh Q Lê, Donghee Koo, Emre Hüner, Eunju Kim, Hye Ryun Jung, Imhathai Suwattanasilp, Inci Eviner, Jinyun Cheong, Jung Moo Cho, Jung-Myung Kim, Kenji Yanobe, Ki-Youl Cha, Kibong Rhee, Kiichiro Adachi, Kohei Nawa, Korean art events, Kosei Komatsu, Lee Pooroni, Living in Evolution, MadeIn, Miki Jo, Min-Kyu Kang, Moo-kyoung Shin, Promoting art, Saburo Muraoka, Sangho Shin, SATA, Seung Jung, Shih Chieh Huang, Shinjung Ryu, Shun Yuan, SongJoon Lee, Southeast Asian art, Southeast Asian artists, Sung Tae Park, Tae Hun Kang, Thaweesak Srithongdee, Tomoko Konoike, Viola Luk, Yishay Garbasz, Young Sun Lim, Zadok Ben-David | Leave a Comment »
Posted by artradar on July 21, 2010
HONG KONG KOREAN SCULPTURE ART EXHIBITIONS
Work by internationally renowned Korean sculptor, Lee Jae-Hyo, will soon be on show in Hong Kong for the first time. In a new exhibition, “From the Third Hand of the Creator”, to be held at Hong Kong’s Kwai Fung Hin Art Gallery from 31 July until 20 August this year, the gallery will present thirty pieces of representative works from Lee Jae-Hyo, including work from his “Wood” and “Nail” series.

Lee Jae-Hyo
Born in Hapchen, South Korea, in 1965, Lee Jae-Hyo graduated from Hong-ik University with a Bachelor degree in Plastic Art. Working with wood, nails, steel and stone as his primary media, Lee focuses his attention on exploring nature’s structural construction. The works are made from a process consisting of dedicated design and complex composing, sculpturing, grinding and refining. The wood pieces are assembled into curves, with which various futurist forms in hyper-modernist style are drawn. Each piece is still embroidered with growth rings. His method has been applauded for exuding a strong personal character and opening up a distinctive direction within contemporary Korean art.
New York-based art writer Jonathan Goodman describes the artist’s work in Sculpture Magazine:
Allowing the materials to speak to him, he builds self-contained worlds that mysteriously communicate with their outer surroundings. One of his most striking images is a photograph of a boat-like structure placed in the midst of a stream whose banks are covered with trees. Clearly a manmade sculpture put out into nature, the work contrasts with and succumbs to its surroundings. In the photograph, self-sufficiency is enhanced by the object’s position in a beautiful scene; the poetics of the sculpture lean on an environment that frames its polished surfaces, conferring a further dignity on a form in keeping with its forested setting.
Lee’s works are created through the assembly of a large number of units of the ingredient, and therefore become the respective images of the individual units. In their overall structures and forms, minimalist geometric lines can be found, rich in hyper-modernist imagination.
Lee’s art is built upon a typical oriental spirit – in the pursuit of unity and a harmonious co-existence between him and the universe, Lee attempts to demonstrate how humanity can continue to develop civilization with grace, on the basis of a mutual respect between the man-made and natural worlds.

Lee Jae-Hyo
Lee Jae-Hyo has exhibited widely: in Korea, Japan, China, the United Kingdom and the United States. He has won many awards, including the Grand Prize of Osaka Triennial (1998), Young Artist of the Day, presented by the Ministry of Culture of Korea (1998) and the Prize of Excellence in the 2008 Olympic Landscape Sculpture Contest. His artwork is collected by a number of prominent Asian, European, American and Pacific museums, hotels and universities.
“From the Third Hand of the Creator” will be on show at Hong Kong’s Kwai Fung Hin Art Gallery from 31 July until 20 August this year.
JAS/KN/KCE
Related Topics: Korean artists, sculpture, gallery shows
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Posted in Art spaces, Gallery shows, Hong Kong, International, Korean, Nature, Sculpture, Utopian art, Venues, Wood | Tagged: art and nature, art exhibition, Asian Art News, Asian artists, Asian Contemporary Art, exhibition, From the Third Hand of the Creator, futurist, gallery show, Grand Prize of Osaka Triennial (1998), Hapchen, Hong Kong art exhibition, Hong-ik University, hyper-modernist style, Jonathan Goodman, Julie Anne Sjaastad, Korean artist, Korean contemporary art, Korean contemporary sculpture, Korean sculpture, Kwai Fung Hin Art Gallery, Lee Jae-Hyo, minimalist geometric lines, Nail series, nails, natural materials, Plastic Art, Prize of Excellence 2008 Olympic Landscape Sculpture Contest, sculpture, sculpture artists, Sculpture Magazine, Solo Exhibition, steel, stone, typical oriental spirit, wood, Wood series, Young Artist of the Day Ministry of Culture of Korea (1998) | Leave a Comment »
Posted by artradar on June 9, 2010
GLOBALISATION CHRISTIE’S ART AUCTIONS
Globalisation in the art market may be slowing down according to an article published recently in The Economist. In spite of the growing numbers of artists and buyers from locales ranging from Africa to Asia, May sales in New York were dominated by American artists.
The article states:
“At the Christie’s sale, the first of the two main evening auctions, three-quarters of the buyers were American”.
With the prices of work by top Asian artists still lagging behind big-name American contemporaries, it may not come as a surprise that Asian artists are sometimes underrepresented in main and evening sales abroad. That is not to say that Asian artists do not fair well in Asian markets. In Artprice’s Top 100 Hammer Price List, only seven Asian artists crack the top 50. Not surprisingly, all were Chinese artists with sales in Beijing or Hong Kong. Numbers such as these suggest that there is still some preference for homegrown artists.

The Beijing sale of Chen Yifei's 'Thinking of History at My Space', 1979 landed him at #69 on Artprice's Hammer Price List
Even so, the unusual dominance of American artists at Christie’s New York sales this past spring did not go unnoticed.
“This is the most significant post-war and contemporary art collection ever sold at auction,” Christie’s Amy Cappellazzo said afterwards. “It was a quintessential American sale.”
We at Art Radar Asia wonder if this is really so surprising? There are few Post War Asian artists represented in these sales because Asian artists have only received attention in the last twenty years. For contemporary artists it is a different matter. While there is no doubt that some Asian artists, and those from other emerging countries, are now well known, their prices still lag behind those of top contemporary American artists. And, of course, main sales, and evening sales in particular, feature only the very best, usually most expensive, works.
Read the full article here.
EH/KN
Related Topics: business of art, collectors, market watch – auctions, market watch – globalisation
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Posted in American, Artist Nationality, Asian, Auctions, Business of art, Collectors, Globalisation, Market watch | Tagged: American artists, Amy Cappellazzo, art auctions, art market, art sales, Artprice's Top 100 Hammer Price List, Asian artists, auctions, Christie's auctions, Christie's May sales, Christie's New York, Christie's sales, contemporary American art, contemporary Asian art, contemporary Chinese art, Erica Holloway, Fu Baoshi, Globalisation, Landscapes Inspired by Du Fu's Poetic Sensibilities, Post War artists, The Economist | Leave a Comment »
Posted by artradar on March 12, 2010
Ai Weiwei is first artist from Asia Pacific to create installation in Tate’s Turbine Hall

Ai Weiwei, Remembering 2009, 2009
Prominent Chinese artist Ai Weiwei will be the next artist in the Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall for the Unilever series (12 Oct 2010-25 Apr 2011). He will be the first artist from the Asia-Pacific region to undertake an installation there.
In the past year, Ai Weiwei has created the installations Remembering 2009, a memorial to schoolchildren who were victims in the 2008 Sichuan earthquake, and Soft Ground 2009 in the Haus der Kunst in Munich. He has also had a solo show at the Mori Art Museum in Tokyo.
Click here for more information at Art Knowledge News.
AL/KCE
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Posted in Ai Weiwei, China, Chinese, Installation, London, Museum shows, Museums, Political, UK | Tagged: Ai Wei Wei, art, Asian art, Asian artists, Chinese art, Chinese contemporary art, Chinese installation art, installation, Sichuan earthquake, Tate Modern, Unilever series | Leave a Comment »
Posted by artradar on March 9, 2010
EMERGING ASIAN ARTISTS – ART PRIZES
Four Asian artists were nominated for Pulse Awards at the PULSE art fair which took place in New York City and Miami between 4-7 March 2010: Shun Duk Kang from Korea, Hiroshige Furuhaka from Japan, Farsad Labbauf from Iran and Sopheap Pich from Cambodia.
Though none of these four artists won either the PULSE award or the People’s Choice award, the fair gave them extensive exposure (they each won their own booths) and point to their status as emerging names in the global scene.

Shin Duk Kang, Heaven and Earth, 2008
Shin Duk Kang, a South Korean artist, is represented by Seoul’s Galerie Pici. She creates installation art that reflect the limits of her material while evoking nature in her work. She also makes prints, which utilize geometric forms to continue exploring the subject of nature.

Hiroshige Fukuhara, The Night Became Starless, 2008
Ai Kowada Gallery 9 represents Hiroshige Fukuhara, who specialises in drawings with graphite and black gesso on wood. Viewers are drawn to the simplicity of his works, as well as the subtle addition of graphite, which makes his black-on-black drawings shimmer from certain angles. Before PULSE, he was featured in PS1’s 2001 show “BUZZ CLUB: News from Japan.”

Farsad Labbauf, Joseph, 2007
Iranian artist Farsad Labbauf combines figurative painting with Iranian calligraphy to create a unified image, regardless of the content of the words or pictures within that image. He refers to his Persian heritage as his inspiration, especially its carpet-making tradition: that unrelated elements were able to come together in linear patterns to create a whole. He concludes that his work is “often an attempt for the union of the internal.”

Sopheap Pich, Cycle, 2005
Sopheap Pich is a Cambodian artist represented by Tyler Rollins Fine Art of New York. His work mostly consists of sculptures of bamboo and rattan that evoke both biomorphic figures and his childhood during the Khmer Rogue period. He has become a major figure in the Cambodian contemporary art scene.
AL/KCE
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Posted in Asian, Cambodian, Drawing, Emerging artists, Fairs, Iranian, Japanese, Korean, New York, Painting, Prizes, Sculpture, USA | Tagged: art, art fair, artists, Asian artists, Asian contemporary artists, Calligraphy, cambodia, Cambodian artist, contemporary art, contemporary Asian art, Farsad Labbauf, Hiroshige Fukuhara, installation, Iran, Iranian artists, Japan, Japanese artist, Korean artist, New York City, print, PULSE art fair, sculpture, Shin Duk Kang, Sopheap Pich, South Korea | 1 Comment »
Posted by artradar on March 3, 2009
TOP ARTISTS ART FAIRS
According to research by Artprice, 92% of the top artists at international art fairs still hail from outside Asia.
The artists who are most frequently presented by galleries (by more than 50 galleries) at the top international art fairs from mid 2007 to mid 2008 are ranked as follows:
- Andy Warhol (133 times),
- Pablo Picasso (130 times),
- Joan Miro (98 times),
- Antoni Tapies (80),
- Sol Lewitt, Sam Francis, Robert Rauschenberg, Lucio
Fontana, Henri Matisse (62),
- Alexander Calder, David Hockney, Frank Stella, Tom Wesselmann, Roy Lichtenstein, Marc Chagall, Jean Dubuffet, Fernand Léger, Alighiero Boetti, Eduardo Chillida, Mimmo Paladino,
Arman, Jannis Kounellis, Henri Moore and Georg Baselitz (50
times).
These are clearly the stars of the art market that figure massively at the top the list.
When the list is expanded to show artists presented by at least 19 galleries, we find that the list of 55 artists is, once again, dominated by American artists. Artists from Asia represent only 8% of this list.
- US artists: 42% of the population (apart from Jean-Michel Basquiat, Keith Haring and Sean Scully previously mentioned,we find Kiki Smith, Donald Baechler, Richard Prince, Nan Goldin, Cindy Sherman, Jeff Koons, Tony Oursler, Julian Schnabel and John Chamberlain).
- Germans arrive in second place with 14% of the artists including Günther Förg and Stephan Balkenhol, but also Thomas Ruff, Anselm Kiefer, Jörg Immendorff, Rosemarie Trockel and Bernd & Hilla Becher.
- In third place, the Italians and British (11% each)
- Spain and China (5% each), followed by
- Switzerland (4%),
- Japan (3%),
- Belgium and Portugal (2% each) and
- Brazil (1%).
Artprice report Contemporary art market 2007/2008
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Posted in Fairs, Market watch | Tagged: art fairs, Asian artists, top artists | Leave a Comment »
Posted by artradar on September 14, 2008
Tushar Joag
ART FAIR CHINA EMERGING ARTISTS
“Best of Discovery” is a unique curated section of Shanghai’s premier art fair ShContemporary 08 featuring over 30 selected emerging artists from the Asia Pacific region who are presented to a global audience for the first time.
In a “ground-breaking move” ShContemporary founder Rudolf has commissioned a team of independent curators with knowledge of their given regions to make an informed selection of work by promising younger artists largely unknown on the international stage says the Financial Times. They have scoured not only China but Australasia, Central Asia, India, Indonesia, Japan, Korea, the Middle East, Taiwan and Thailand.
The works are on display in an open-format, museum-like installation in the grounds of and inside the imposing Soviet-built Shanghai Exhibition Centre, where the ShContemporary fair is held from September 10 to 13 2008.
Selected on merit not gallery affiliation
The pieces have been selected not on gallery affiliation but on merit alone. “In fact” says the Financial Times “half the artists selected had no gallery representation at all. For the purposes of the fair, exhibiting dealers have sponsored these artists, forging temporary relationships that may well continue after the event.”
“Markedly experimental”
The 11 international curators selected a range of “markedly experimental” works says Artkrush. “Pieces by better-known figures such as Beijing’s Wang Luyan – a muscular satirist of consumption and politics – share space with Yael Bartana who employs cultural symbols to unpack political concerns, and from Japan, upstart provocateur Tadasu Takamine – most notorious for his controversial Kimura-san video, which shows the artist helping a disabled friend masturbate – is grouped with his more sedate countryman Sakae Ozawa.”
Intriguing art from Central Asia, Caucasus
The Financial Times notes that “the most intriguing is the work being produced in those regions where creativity has been frozen, corrupted or isolated for decades, even centuries”. Perhaps least known is the art of the new Central Asian republics which first made their debut on the international stage at the Venice Biennale in 2005. To represent Central Asia and the Caucasus, curator Sara Raza has alighted on the work of the outlandish Kazak performance artist Erbossyn Meldibekov and also on the emerging Georgian artist Sophia Tabatadze.
List of Asian artists: Cambodia: Sopheap Pich (1969 Cambodia), Central Asia: Sophia Tabatadze (1977 Georgia), Erbossyn Meldibekov (1964 Kazakhstan), China: Wang Luyan (1956 Beijing), Zhu Jinshi (1954 Beijing), Wang Zhiyuan (1958 Tianjin China), Shi Yong (1963 Shanghai), Chen Yenling (1969 China), Taiwan: Effie Wu (1973 Taiwan), Huang Po-Chih (1980 Taiwan), India: Tushar Joag (1966 India), Vibha Galhotra (1978 India), Ved Gupta (1975 India), Sumedh Rajendran (1972 India), Indonesia: Agus Suwage (1959 Indonesia), J Ariadhitya Pramuhendra (1984 Indonesia), Japan: Tadasu Takamine (1968 Japan), Sakae Ozawa (1980 Japan), Hiraki Sawa (1977 Japan), Korea: Jina Park (1974 US works in Korea), Clara Shin (1974 Brazil works in Korea), Jo Jong Sung( 1977 Korea), Thailand: Dearborn K Mendhaka (1979 Thailand), Vietnam: Nguyen Thai Tuan (1965 Vietnam), Israel: Yael Bartana (1970 Israel), Iran: Reza Aramesh (1968 Iran)
List of Asian specialist curators: Erin Gleeson (Cambodia), Sara Raza (Central Asia, Western Asia, Middle East), Huang Du (China), Sean CS Hsu (Taiwan), Deeksha Nath (India), Rikky Effendy (Indonesia), Reiko Tsubaki (Japan), Shin Young Chung (Korea), Sutee Kunavichayanont (Thailand), Din Q Le (Vietnam)
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Posted in China, Chinese, Fairs, Georgian, Indian, Indonesian, Iranian, Israeli, Japanese, Kazakhstani, Korean, Middle Eastern, Southeast Asian, Taiwanese, Thai | Tagged: Agus Suwage, Asian artists, Asian curators, Best of Discovery, Cambodian artist, Chen Yenling, Chinese artist, Clara Shin, contemporary indian art, curators in Asia, curators of Asian art, Dearborn K Mendhaka, Effie Wu, emerging artists in Asia, Erbossyn Meldibekov, Georgian artist, Hiraku Sawa, Huang Po-Chih, Indian artists, Indian sculpture, Indonesian artist, Iranian artist, Israeli artist, J Ariadhitya Pramuhendra, Japanese artists, Jina Park, Jo Jong Sung, Kazakhstani artists, Korean artists, Nguyen Thai Tuan, Reza Aramesh, Sakae Ozawa, ShContemporary, ShContemporary 08, Shi Yong, Sopheap Pich, Sophia Tabatadze, Sumedh Rajendran, Tadasu Takamine, Taiwanese artists, Thai artists, Tushar Joag, Ved Gupta, Vibha Galhotra, Vietnamese artists, Wang Luyan, Wang Zhiyuan, Yael Bartana, Zhu Jinshi | Leave a Comment »