Buk-Seoul Museum of Art B1st Children's Gallery
2024.06.04~2025.05.05
Free
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Sculpture, Drawing
Meekyoung Shin
100
SeMA/ Sponsored by CANSON, DERWENT
Suyeon Do 02-2124-5272
안내 데스크 02-2124-5248,5249
Celestial Whisper is an exhibition by sculptor Meekyoung Shin, who has built a unique body of work using soap as her main material. The theme of the exhibition, angels, is a religious symbol that connects God and humans. More than that, however, angels serve as symbolic beings that have become a natural part of our perception. Visualizing the image of angels as those that lie somewhere between what exists and what is absent, the artist first became interested in angels when she came across a fragrance called “Angel.”
In this exhibition, Shin highlights the meaning of angels, something that everyone knows of yet has never seen. Her angel is a being in the realm of illusion, hovering between heaven and earth, life and death, body and soul, and is presented metaphorically through the material properties of soap. The artist has used soap as a material for her sculptures for more than 30 years. For Shin, soap also has a materiality to it that wavers between transparency and opacity. Still, it is destined to wear down over time, while its scent can only be experienced by those who have come in contact with it in person. These characteristics of soap are connected to the symbolism of angels, who are intermediate beings between heaven and earth. In particular, the transparency of soap, the light that maximizes its transparency, and its many different scents allow visitors to experience the presence of angels that oscillate between existence and absence.
Visitors can draw closer to contemporary art by appreciating sculptures made from everyday soap, allowing their imagination to run wild through angels, a familiar yet unseen entity.
We hope that this exhibition, which is filled with the light and fragrance of angels that evoke a kind of fantasy across generations, will inspire you to rediscover the very same angels you have always felt are familiar.
The Buk-Seoul Museum of Art coexists with its local community. Located in Nowon-gu―an area whose name is derived from the “Reed Hill” nearby―the museum is an open structure with its entrance connected to a park. In addition to outdoor sculpture exhibitions, it offers maze-like galleries, an art library, a cafe, and a multipurpose hall. These spaces host a variety of programs for families, which make up the majority of visitors to this museum.
61, Deoksugung-gil, Jung-gu, Seoul, Republic of Korea (04515)
82-2-2124-8800