German and Russian artists present Sweet Bread exhibition in Seoul

Four artists from Germany and Russia have opened the group exhibition Sweet Bread at KOTE in Seoul's Insa-dong neighborhood, presenting works inspired by their experiences living in Korea. The show runs until June 11.

The exhibition features artists Laila Kamil from the Academy of Fine Arts Leipzig, Niklas Kleemann, Ava Korte from the University of Augsburg, and Russian photographer Amalia Ekshenger. They met through studies at Chung-Ang University or prior connections in Germany and created works reflecting shifts in perception while living in Korea. Laila Kamil presented a series of generative postcards based on ordinary Seoul scenes such as subway stations and street signs. She noted that “postcards in Korea often focus on palaces,” while she prefers everyday urban views. Niklas Kleemann installed Argus Disc, a work using microcontrollers to track the sun’s position in real time. Ava Korte and Amalia Ekshenger collaborated on photography that captured spontaneous interactions with older locals during shoots. Ekshenger said she admires “a sense of childlike curiosity” she encountered in Korea. The show opened to visitors on June 5.

Relaterade artiklar

Loewe Foundation öppnade sin årliga Craft Prize-utställning i Singapore på tisdagen, vilket markerar utställningens första framträdande i Sydostasien. Den sydkoreanske keramikern Jongjin Park tog emot förstapriset på 50 000 euro för sin porslins- och pappersskulptur Strata of Illusion.

Rapporterad av AI

PhotoVogue Festival tar sin utställning 'Women by Women' till Seoul som en del av Vogue Koreas tredje årliga Leaders-evenemang. Utställningen, som markerar festivalens 10-årsjubileum, öppnar tillsammans med samtal om kvinnors handlingsutrymme den 27 till 29 mars på Layer Studio 20 i Yongsan-gu. Den presenterar verk från 9 500 konstnärer i 149 länder som svarade på en global öppen inbjudan.

The Centro de Arte Hortensia Herrero in Valencia hosts Anselm Kiefer's first temporary exhibition in Spain in 20 years, featuring a 13-meter work never shown in Europe before. The German artist, born in 1945 amid postwar ruins, displays pieces exploring German history and mythology. Curator Javier Molins calls his work 'an unfathomable ocean of so many layers'.

Rapporterad av AI

Two famed water lily paintings by French Impressionist Claude Monet go on display in Hong Kong from Friday in a free exhibition highlighting East-West cultural exchange. Titled “Blooming: the Art of Garden in East and West”, the show features more than 100 exhibits from the Art Institute of Chicago, Beijing’s Palace Museum, the Palace of Versailles and the Hong Kong Museum of Art. Museum director Maria Mok Kar-wing said it reflects the museum's diverse Hong Kong identity.

 

 

 

Denna webbplats använder cookies

Vi använder cookies för analys för att förbättra vår webbplats. Läs vår integritetspolicy för mer information.
Avböj