Comprising five new paintings and three video installations, 'The Days were Snowy but Warm' featuring work by artist Oh Myung Hee and curated by Metamorphosis Art Projects, reframes the historical female experience in Korea at this year’s Venice Biennale. Award-winning artist Oh Myung Hee is a graduate of Sejong University and an Honorary Professor of College of Art & Design, at Suwon University, South Korea. She has exhibited extensively, including a solo exhibition at London’s Saatchi Gallery, the Kaze Gallery, Osaka, the Galerie Bhak, (Bhak Young-Duk), in Seoul, and at the Espace Miromesnil, in Paris.

“Just as in life, my works aim to communicate the message that though we face pain, conflict and innumerable difficulties, spring comes around again, and just like flowers bloom, so does hope and warmth.” - Oh Myung Hee

Oh Myung Hee venice
Images of a Korean family: From her father in law’s photograph album, Oh Myung Hee juxtaposes the ‘main wife’ (bon-cheo) and the ‘second wife’ (cheop) on each side, contrasting these solitary women with men emanating group strength.

Following the Korean War, the country was impoverished and starving. Yet to the women of Korea, the end of the war also ushered in an era of personal liberation. Japanese suppression gave way to a Western democratic system, opening the door to their wider social participation and, following a post-civil war visit from Hollywood superstar Marilyn Monroe in 1953, the doors swung open even further.

Nevertheless, the social undertow of male privilege and inertia meant that progress has been surprisingly slow — and even more marked when set against Korea’s extraordinary economic growth over the last three decades.

It is this tension — and the resonance of female emotions within a patriarchal society— that South Korean artist Oh Myung Hee interprets in her powerful new body of work ‘The Days were Snowy but Warm’, unveiled at this year’s Personal Structures exhibition in Palazzo Mora, Venice at the invitation of the European Cultural Centre.

Oh Myung Hee contemporary art
Nostalgia, 2022. Acrylic on Canvas, Mother of Pearl  

This exhibition, which runs concurrently with the Venice Biennale next month, is themed around Reflections — a concept that Oh Myung Hee has interpreted through both the cool gaze of the historical long lens and the close-up of deeply personal family stories.

Inspired by a family photograph, discovered in her father-in-law’s album, she was struck by the challenges and contradictions that Korean women have historically had to synthesize in order to access position, purpose and happiness.

The post-war transition meant that women, historically confined to and defined by their role in the extended family for hundreds of years, began to realize their own rights and abilities to contribute to fields such as politics, social affairs, religion and education. Yet this realization was slow to translate to status.

Mixing old techniques with new materials and technology with old family photographs, Oh Myung Hee uses Hwajo, traditional blossom and birds, in her mixed media work as representations of femininity — a force at once splendid and free — materializing women’s emotions against the historical realities of Korea’s male-dominated society with its underlying Confucianism. Throughout her career, she has also used an image of a flying scarf to symbolize her desire for freedom. Freedom in all aspects of life, from the chains of traditional society, to her desire to fly like a silk scarf in the wind.

Oh Myung Hee contemporary artist
Secret Chamber, lacquer painted on antique furniture from Jeju Island in Korea, mother of pearl, video monitor, 2022: Oh Myung Hee creates video works for a black lacquered cabinet from Jeju Island, where she spent her summers as a child, bringing the memories forward to our time and space.

This latest exhibition builds on the powerful energy displayed within her works since she came to prominence in the early nineties with an oeuvre featuring vibrant scarves drifting over green grass. Her paintings and images overflow with colors and emotions that seek to embody the powerful prism of femininity and freedom.

In ‘The Days were Snowy but Warm’, she travels through family stories, via Westernization, Korean traditionalism and pop culture – notably a 1953 visit by Marilyn Monroe to US troops stationed in Korea. The title of the exhibition paraphrases a Monroe interview quote, in which she describes her performance in front of 17,000 American soldiers as "It was snowing but I felt warm".

The visit, during her honeymoon with newlywed Joe DiMaggio, was courageous even by Western standards and became a crucial catalyst for the women of Korea. Piqued that more fans turned out in Japan to see Monroe instead of him, the baseball player refused to join her in Korea. They divorced later that year.

His loss was Korea’s gain. In choosing to pursue her own road, this beautiful free spirit inspired many Korean women to pursue their own dreams and become who they wanted to be. ‘The Days were Snowy but Warm’ challenges an historical ‘narrative of sorrow’ surrounding Korean women, and considers how we must look back to move forward, living and transforming in one unbroken chain of experience.

Oh Myung Hee
Images of womanhood: Oh Myung Hee juxtaposes a traditional Korean wife in an unassuming, monochromatic dress, with scarcely clad, confident and free Monroe on one side, and Hye-Seok Nah, pioneering Korean feminist, writer and artist on the other.


“My works speak of a collective memory,” says Oh Myung Hee. “My generation did not directly experience war; nevertheless, we share the pain of our mothers and grandmothers who bore the scars of war. In Korea, the lump in one’s heart that is filled with pain is expressed as ‘Han.’ At first glance, my works might appear flashy, but a closer look reveals the frailty which resembles the emotions of ‘Han’ or the DNA of emotions.

'The Days were Snowy but Warm' runs from April 23 - November 27, 2022 at the Palazzo Mora, Venice.

For additional information: 

https://www.metamorphosis-artprojects.com/

https://www.carolomh.com/


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