Spencer Museum of Art The University of Kansas

Mobile Landscape: Kim Jongku Artist Project

February 14 – February 28, 2010 | Electronic Arts Space

This February, Seoul-based artist Kim Jongku will come to Lawrence to create a site-specfic installation in the Electornic Media Gallery. Funded by the William T. Kemper Foundation, this two-week residency is part of a larger initiative at the Spencer to create a vibrant International Artists-in-Residence Program that connects artists from around the world with the broader intellectual life of the University of Kansas.

For this residency, Kim will create a Mobile Landscape. Working with black, steel powder, Kim “writes” poetic inscriptions on the floor of a pristine, white environment. Then, using closed circuit cameras positioned on the floor, he broadcasts the constructed vistas. The result evokes the appearance of traditional Korean ink-and-brush painting, however, the scale is inverted—a shoe now dwarfs a mountain. As part of the project, we are exploring the possibility of broadcasting gallery live feeds to a variety of campus and off-site locations in Lawrence.

Kim Jongku was born 1963 in Choong Nam, South Korea. He graduated with a B.F.A. and from Seoul National University in 1993 and an M.F.A from Chelsea College of Art and Design, London in 1996. Kim has exhibited widely in Europe and Asia, including the Gwangju Biennale (2006), Re-Imagining Asia, Berlin (2007), and solo exhibitions at One and J. Gallery, Seoul, Korea. Kim currently teaches in the Department of Sculpture at Ewha Women’s University in Seoul.


Public Programs

2.25
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Lecture: Kim Jongku on "Mobile Landscape"
6 PM / SMA Auditorium
Sponsored by Spencer Museum of Art and Kemper Foundation / Jongku is a Kemper Foundation International Artist-in-Residence. This February Korean artist Kim Jongku will create a site-specific installation at the Spencer as part of a two-week residency funded by the William T. Kemper Foundation. Working at the juncture of tradition and technology, Kim uses industrial steel filings and closed circuit television to create constructed landscapes that explore the transient, shifting place of humans within the natural world.
2.25
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Opening Reception: Mobile Landscape: Kim Jongku
7 PM / Central Court
2.26
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T.N.T. The Noon Thing: Kim Jongku
12 PM / H&R Block Artspace, Kansas City
Conversation with artist Kim Jongku; Raechell Smith, Director of H&R Block Artspace; and Kris Ercums, SMA Curator of Asian Art