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Art+_Art Spectrum FUTURA SEOUL: An Interface of Light, Nature, and Architecture in Bukchon Hanok Village At 61 Bukchon-ro, Jongno-gu, in the heart of Seoul’s traditional hanok cluster, FUTURA SEOUL bridges the grain of heritage architecture with a boldly contemporary exhibition infrastructure. The core is a main hall with roughly 10.8-meter clear height spanning levels 1–2, linked to upper terraces and a rooftop garden. Generous daylighting pulls the outside deep into the interior, so along the circulation you read layered vistas of light, nature, and city all at once.
2025.08.19

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Art Market_Art Voice A Legislative Push for Korea’s Art Market, But Where Are the Voices from the Field?

On August 8, Seoul’s National Assembly Members’ Office Building played host to a marathon policy seminar, ambitiously titled “Legal Support Measures for Art Market Revitalization.”

2025.08.12
Art+_Art Voice The Return of the Old Boys — What Their Comeback Should Mean

In 2025, two of Korea’s most prominent art figures have returned to lead major cultural institutions. Yoo Hong-jun, former Administrator of the Cultural Heritage Administration, has been appointed Director of the National Museum of Korea, while Yoon Bum-mo, former Director of the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (MMCA), has taken the helm as the new CEO of the Gwangju Biennale. Both are respected art historians, critics, and curators with long careers in the field. Their return has inspired expectations of “stability” and “experience.”

2025.07.29
Art+_Art Voice Why Are Black Artists the 'Trend' of the Moment? Two PCs and the Rise of Black Artists: What It Means for the Future of Korean Contemporary Art

Since the early 2020s, the global art world has undergone a rapid reconfiguration. At the heart of this transformation is an unprecedented focus on Black artists. From major museum exhibitions to art fair demand and collector interest, the entire ecosystem reflects this shift. Yet this isn't merely a passing trend. Rather, it is the visible outcome of two converging cultural forces: Postcolonialism and Political Correctness (PC).

2025.07.22
Museum_Art Voice Ron Mueck Exhibition and the Blockbuster Phenomenon of Museums : The Role and Value of Public Art Museums

The solo exhibition of Australian hyperrealist sculptor Ron Mueck, currently being held at the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (MMCA) in Seoul, is drawing more than 5,000 visitors per day and is expected to surpass 500,000 visitors within two months.

2025.07.08
Museum_Art Voice On the Opening of the Seoul Museum of Photography

On May 29, 2025, the Seoul Museum of Photography (Photography Seoul Museum of Art) opens its doors in Chang-dong, Dobong-gu, Seoul. As the first public art museum in Korea dedicated entirely to the photographic medium, this institution is not merely another museum opening—it is a historic milestone.

2025.05.27
Art Fair_Art Voice Review: Art Busan 2025, An art fair aspiring to become a platform — What was gained, and what was left behind?

Art Busan 2025 concluded its four-day run on May 11 at BEXCO in Haeundae, Busan. Now in its 14th edition, the fair brought together 109 galleries from 17 countries in an effort to reinforce Busan’s position as a hub of contemporary art in East Asia. However, the outcome reflected more of the current art market realities than a major shift.

2025.05.13

Art Insights

Providing insightful perspectives and in-depth analysis of Korean contemporary art.
Art+_Art Insight The Age of Reification: The Crisis of Capitalism and Fine Art (Final Chapter) - Art is Art, Money is Money, Market is Market

In capitalist society, art can no longer remain solely in an independent and autonomous realm. Today, artworks are reduced to prices within the market’s evaluative systems; their lifespan is extended or erased depending on their investment potential.

2025.08.12
Art+_Art Insight The Age of Reification: The Crisis of Capitalism and Fine Art (9) - Analyzing the Structure of Collectors’ Desire - Is Collecting a Store of Value or a Social Signifier?

“Who bought that piece?” This question often wields more power than the artwork’s intrinsic aesthetics or philosophy. In today’s art world, the collector is not merely a purchaser but a powerful actor who structures value and inscribes narrative.

2025.07.29
Art+_Art Insight The Age of Reification: The Crisis of Capitalism and Fine Art (8) - How Semiotic Capitalism Has Neutralized Fine Art

In the 21st century, late capitalism has evolved beyond an economy of production and consumption into a system where symbols and signs dominate value. Jean Baudrillard called this the “political economy of the sign,” where the symbolic meaning of things supersedes their material substance. In such a system, commodities are no longer just physical objects—they are bundles of signs, socially coded and ideologically charged.

2025.07.15
Art+_Art Insight The Age of Reification: The Crisis of Capitalism and Fine Art (7) - How Must Fine Art Exist in the Age of AI?

Fine art has always touched the deepest strata of the human spirit. It is not simply the skill of creating aesthetic objects, but the act of a living human being attempting to understand themselves. While humans have evolved by using tools, it is in writing poetry and painting images that they crossed from utility into the realm of the mind. Art was born at this very threshold, and it has defined civilization ever since.

2025.07.01
Art+_Art Insight The Age of Reification: The Crisis of Fine Art and Capitalism (6) - Who Is Public Arts Funding Really For?

Public support was once the final bastion of art. It served as the only mechanism through which art could defend itself from the logic of the market—a space where the essence of artistic creation could be protected from the accelerating demands of capital.

2025.06.17
Art Market_Art Insight The Age of Reification: Capitalism and the Crisis of Fine Art (5) - Are Auctions and Art Fairs Destroyers or Creators of Pure Art?

In today’s global art market, auctions and art fairs are no longer simply distribution channels or temporary festivities. Auctions reduce art to quantifiable numbers, while art fairs promote the rapid reproduction and immediate consumption of market-friendly works. Empowered by capital, these two forces now dictate not only the market’s direction but also the survival conditions of artists themselves.

2025.06.03