Three Artists Who Read the World Anew through Photography: Kim Shinwook, Kim Chun Soo, and Jung Jihyun - K-ARTNOW
Jung Jihyun (b.1983) Seoul, Korea

Jung Jihyun graduated from Chung-Ang University’s Department of Photography (2010) and obtained a master’s degree (2016). He later completed his Ph.D. program in the Department of Arts at the same graduate school (2019).

Solo Exhibitions (Brief)

Jung Jihyun has held eight solo exhibitions held in various spaces such as SongEun Art Space(Seoul, Korea), KT&G Sangsangmadang(Seoul, Korea), SPACEONEWWALL(Seoul, Korea), BMW Photo Space(Busan, Korea) so far.

Group Exhibitions (Brief)

Jung Jihyun has been participated in a wide range of group exhibitions held at Incheon Art Platform(Incheon, Korea), Kimchungup Architecture Museum(Anyang, Korea), Seoul Museum of Art(Seoul, Korea), Korean Culture Center(Warsaw, Poland), Amorepacific Museum of Art(Seoul, Korea) and Gyeonggi Creation Center(Ansan, Korea).

Awards (Selected)

Jung Jihyun received the 14th SAJINBIPYONG Award(Photo Space, Korea). He was selected the final artist of the year of the 6th KT&G SKOPF(KT&G Sangsangmadang, Korea) and nominated for International Photo Award such as Leica Oskar Barnak Award and Prix Pictet.

Collections (Selected)

His works are in collections of various museums such as National Musesum of Modern and Contemporary Art(Gwacheon, Korea), Seoul Museum of Art(Seoul, Korea), Busan Museum of Contemporary Art(Busan, Korea), AmorePacific Museum(Seoul, Korea), The Museum of Photography(Seoul, Korea and GoEun Museum of Photography(Busan, Korea).

Originality & Identity

Jung Jihyun is making art by recording and memorizing urban architecture with photographs. The apartment where he has lived, Jamsil Jugong APT, started to redevelop in his twenties. The whole area where his childhood memories had suddenly disappeared.

This experience of losing his memories was a major impression on him that influenced him considerably.

The artist shoots photos of the construction sites of buildings that are deconstructed or constructed. He often encounters these construction sites while walking down the streets, but these are partial realities hidden by the curtain of the construction area.

In his prior works, he had deㅁalt with the city’s history by filming construction sites of apartment buildings being deconstructed or redeveloped. Recently, he has tried to record the newest skyscrapers that make up the large structure of the city and imagine the city’s future.

His photographs incorporate two opposing activities; architectural photography preserves and archives urban architecture, and artistic photography dismantles and reveals hidden things. He intervenes in the form of an object on the construction site and constructs his art form by temporarily transforming parts of the architecture.

Painting walls in red, he marks the deconstructive sites in the past and then changes some of the pieces in his artistic ways.  Jung Jihyun exposes the ‘inside’ of the buildings, neither inside nor outside of the buildings.

Jung Jihyun’s photo captures disappearing landscapes and construction sites that constantly change day by day. As the process of construction work is being built at its own pace. Therefore, he could only capture the red concrete power which he had painted before, and it is because the wall exploded in a day. The underlying lesson for the artist is that if the moments are not captured immediately, then the critical art materials disappear. It becomes a motivation for the artist to observe and record with desperation.

The audience constantly realizes the emptiness and limited feeling after appreciating the scenery of breaking down the buildings. The apartments that are someone’s symbol of dream collapse by the new stakeholders and the logic of capitalism.

However, the artist records continuously without any compassion. As it is layered with ceaseless vertical and horizontal structures, the buildings are intersected with different memories and thoughts.

Style & Contents

Jung Jihyun received great attention with his series ‘Demolision Site’ (2013) and ‘Reconstruction Site’ (2015), expressed with red colour by the intervention of the artist. He initially discovers and intervenes in the ‘site’ and observes the shifts of the area through continued experiences for a long time. In this process, the artist becomes a part of the space and temporarily occupies it through the act of painting an entire floor.

For the next step, he goes outside and looks for a suitable area where a frame can be set. The red wall from the outside of the building was soon shattered into particles by the demolition progress.

City buildings are a place where various narratives intersect, but it is hard to read the detailed history of individuals or society. What is outstanding in these dry photos are the images of broken sections, the structure of buildings, and the shapes and textures of architectural elements.

The artist actively invaded the space so that his photos imply the meaning of visual spectacles of the ruins, not just consuming the art materials. The red wall represents traces from the construction work like temporal sounds or the collapse of buildings.

Recently, Jung Jihyun mainly worked on archiving the construction process of new buildings in commission type. He carried out various archive works, such as ‘Construct’ (2017), where he documented the construction of Amore Pacific’s new office building. In ‘Reconstruct’ (2020~2021), he documented the remodeling and restoration of the SamIl Building (the first skyscraper and curtainwall building in Korea) symbolizing the high economic growth in the 1970s, and ‘Structure Studies Topology’ (2019~2021) contains the construction site of the new building SongEun Art Space.

Jung Jihyun records the ever-changing appearance of the building from the groundwork to the completed construction works. He was invited by the core member of the construction field, unlike in the past, when he had to sneak inside the building or get permission.

The construction field allows a more intimate and delicate perspective when he captures the sites with photographs. The artist intervenes in the objects inside the building that create space and illustrates the shifts of the interior materials and functions. Sometimes he builds up various formats and aesthetics within the construction site with installation.

Constancy & Continuity

The photos that the artist films in the building have an automatic historical meaning as cities’ environmental archives. However, Jung Jihyun’s works have a different style from other architectural photos that illustrate objective information or collecting architectural types.

Jung Jihyun’s photographs describe places that have already been blasted and disappeared and, hence, have a unique sense of time and meaning.

His works are accompanied by both historical photographs and artistic activities. The visual enjoyment is also impressive, but it is worth noting that it continues to redefine how photography works. The performance by his attitude, intervening in space can be seen as a type of contemporary art.

Artistic experiments such as abstract spatial drawing attempted by arranging objects on the construction site and tactical contract of various materials also transform the works. It occurs some unanticipated points for the audience. Also, Jung Jihyun places his photos on multiple materials and contexts. He printed the pictures on adhesive vinyl and installed them in outdoor spaces or UV printing on the smooth glass to create a visual and tactile experience.

The critical point why Jung Jihyun is a unique photographer position is that these metaphors and artist expressions are placed on a neutral attitude. Rather than capturing objects that evoke emotional nostalgia, the artist concentrates on visual and structural forms of architecture. Jung Jihyun’s cynical and refined perspective continued to make a historical change inside and outside the city. This has the meaning of archiving the public memories inside the buildings.

Three Artists Who Read the World Anew through Photography: Kim Shinwook, Kim Chun Soo, and Jung Jihyun
A Team
Kim Shinwook, Kim Chun Soo, Jung Jihyun

Photography has become an important art form in contemporary art and has allowed artists to embody ideas and feelings that are otherwise difficult to express in other art forms.

With the medium’s fast-changing technology, many contemporary Korean photographers use this genre to put traditional subjects into new contexts and compositions. Kim Shinwook, Kim Chun Soo, and Jung Jihyun are three of the many artists who create unique images through photography to read our contemporary world anew.


Artist Kim Shinwook. Courtesy of the Artist.

Kim Shinwook (b.1982)

Kim Shinwook’s main interest does not lie in capturing the subjects themselves when taking pictures for his artwork. He focuses instead on the peripheries and unravels these surrounding stories from an ethnographic or cultural perspective. In order to capture these narratives in his photography, Kim also conducts interviews and research to learn about the people, the landscape, history, and legends that exist within these boundaries. Thus, Kim’s artworks often accompany different kinds of archival materials. 

Kim’s works are deeply related to his personal experiences and interests. His previous works were about the marginalized stories surrounding the Heathrow Airport in London. While he was studying in the city and providing airport pick-up services for a living, Kim focused on the changing landscape, the lives of people, and the judicial system caused by the existence of the airport. Also, in relation to his family—his grandparents were originally from North Korea—Kim also studied the life of a North Korean defector living in London, or the border area between North and South Korea. Through Kim’s works that talk about the perimeters and boundaries, viewers are able to encounter new perspectives and stimulate imaginations.


Exhibition view of the 7th Amado Photography Award, Kim Shinwook Solo Exhibition "In Search of Nessie" at Amado Artspace/Lab, Seoul. November 20 - December 20, 2020. ⓒ Artist/ Amado Artspace/Lab.

Kim Shinwook received the 2013 British Institution Awards from the Royal Academy of Art (UK), the 2018 ManifestO Recontres Photographiques de Toulouse (France), the 7th Amado Photography Award (Korea), and the 2022 IL WOO Photograph Award (Korea). His works are in the permanent collection at the Kiyosato Museum of Photographic Arts (Japan), the GoEun Museum of Photography (Korea), Oriel College, the University of Oxford (UK), Seoul City Hall (Korea), and many others. 


Artist Kim Chun Soo. Courtesy of the Artist.

Kim Chun Soo (b.1981)

Kim Chun Soo is interested in the problems in our society where digital technology rapidly develops. As a medium that captures the likeness to reality, photography inevitably captures the imperfect sides of our world, where numerous terrorisms, conflicts, and discriminations happen. Although technology is rapidly advancing, there are still malformations occurring in photography. Likewise, our society seems to develop continuously but still contains incompleteness. These inherent errors in photography and our society are similar to the artist. Thus he attempts to reveal this connection through the medium.

Kim visualizes distortion and noise in his works to reproduce the vulnerability of modern society. During his study in the UK, Kim has observed various social problems surrounding the multicultural nation. He captured and recorded places where social incidents occurred, such as where terrorist attacks took place. He distorts the image and sometimes adds texts related to the incident. These errors and distractions in the picture often look like visual damage but also a new type of visual element, which reveals the ambivalence of both photography and our society. In his works, Kim keeps the structure very simple but adds many layers of stories to his photography, such as leaving clues in the texts used in the artwork or the titles of the exhibitions.   


Exhibition view of "Kim Chun Soo: Low-cut, Low-pass" at Ilwoo Space, Seoul. August 30 - October 2, 2018. ⓒ Artist/ Ilwoo Foundation.

Kim Chun Soo had solo exhibitions at Space 22 in 2019 (Korea), Ilwoo Space in 2018 (Korea), the Insa Art Center in 2009 (Korea), and Space Baba in 2007 (Korea). He had participated in numerous group exhibitions at SeMA Bunker in 2018 (Korea), Kuenstlerhaus Bethanien in 2012 (Germany) and many others. In 2018, he was awarded the 9th Ilwoo Photography Award in the exhibition category (Korea).


Artist Jung Jihyun. Courtesy of the Artist.

Jung Jihyun (b.1983)

Jung Jihyun documents changing urban environments. He is especially interested in taking pictures of construction sites in redevelopment areas where buildings are torn down or being constructed. Jung captures the process of the changes in the urban city and attempts to contain the hidden stories surrounding the buildings. To Jung, capturing these moments is both a way to preserve the history of a city as well as a way to carry out his artistic practices. 

As an architectural photographer, Jung enters the construction or demolition sites of a redevelopment area where people are restricted from entering. Jung does not merely take photos of these places but intervenes by adding some changes to the buildings. In his Demolition Site series, for example, Jung paints the rooms of a soon-to-be-torn-down building in red to emphasize that those places were once a home to someone and are about to vanish from our lives. Jung also follows the traces of the fragments from the red walls when the site begins to get deconstructed.


Exhibition view of Jihyun Jung Solo Exhibition, "RECONSTRUCTION SITE" at Gallery O’NewWall, Seoul. April 20, 2016 - May 10, 2016. © Arist/ Gallery O’NewWall.

Jung Jihyun held solo exhibitions at SongEun Art Cube in 2013 (Korea), KT&G Sangsangmadang in 2014 (Korea), Gallery O’NewWall in 2016 (Korea), and BMW Photo Space in 2015 (Korea). Jung received the 14th SAJINBIPYONG Award, Photo Space (Korea), and was a finalist for the 6th KT&G SKOPF in 2014 (Korea). He was also nominated for the Leica Oskar Barnak Award and Prix Pictet.

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