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Global acclaim for trailblazing Korean artist Jung Kang-ja

SEOUL (ANN/THE KOREA HERALD) – Jung Kang-ja, a pioneer among few female artists shaping Korean experimental art during the 1960s to 1970s, remains largely unknown.

Arario Gallery illuminates her journey, showcasing around 70 works in Shanghai and Seoul.

The Shanghai exhibition, “Jung KangJa: Life Goes On,” provides insight into Jung’s trajectory from the 1980s to 2000s, featuring artworks inspired by her extensive travels across South America and Africa.

After her debut solo show “Incorporeality” in 1970 was forcibly closed by the authoritarian regime, which labelled her as a “rebellious artist,” Jung spent many years abroad. Upon returning to Korea in the 1980s, she created works for over four decades.

An installation view of “Jung KangJa: Life Goes On” in Shanghai. PHOTO: ANN/THE KOREA HERALD SOURCE

Although she did not receive proper recognition in the Korean art scene, she dedicated her life to art until her passing at 75 in 2017, according to Arario Gallery.

“We aimed to introduce the artist to collectors in China because many of them would not be familiar with her name.

Along with her paintings, we put the artist’s signature installation, ‘To Repress’ created in 1968, to highlight her contribution to Korea’s avant-garde art in the 1960s to 1970s,” an official from the gallery told the source.

Arario Gallery’s exhibition in Shanghai runs through January 6.

Jung is one of the artists featured at the Guggenheim Museum exhibition “Only the Young: Experimental Art in Korea, 1960s-1970s” that opened in New York in September 2023.

Arario Gallery presented the artist in Seoul last year at art fairs as well as her solo exhibition, “Jung Kangja: It Has Always Been the Beginning,” which ran through December 30, 2023, showing some 40 works.

“Self Portrait with Dragon” by Jung Kang-ja. PHOTO: ANN/THE KOREA HERALD SOURCE

The exhibition in Seoul focused on Jung’s late paintings from 1995 to the 2000s, showing how she took a turn toward abstract and transcendent forms in the late years – some of the works show motifs symbolising the traditions of her homeland such as reinterpreting hanbok, the traditional Korean attire.

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