DanO Spring Festival 2017
DanO (단오), also called Surit-nal (수릿날), is a Korean traditional holiday celebrating the end of the sowing season. It falls on the fifth day of the fifth month of the Korean lunar calendar. Dating from ancient Korea, this is a day of spiritual rites and enjoyment, with song, dance, and wine.
SCHEDULE OF EVENTS
Friday, May 12, 2017 | Farrell Auditorium, Saint Louis Art Museum
(Presented in partnership with the St. Louis Art Museum.)
— Free to the Public —
6:00 - 7:00 pm Reception. Cocktails, cash bar, and conversation with CYJO
7:00 - 9:00 pm Screening of CYJO’s KYOPO Project
Saturday, May 13, 2017 | 1 CityPlace Drive, Creve Coeur, MO
— $60 per person. Includes buffet dinner and beverages —
4:30 - 5:30 pm Reception with CYJO
5:30 - 7:00 pm GKF Program & Buffet Dinner, Traditional Korean Food
7:00 - 8:30 pm Panel Presentation on Art and Immigration
About Friday’s Program
Migration – the moving of people from one region to another for a better life – marks part of human history, American history, and continues even more so today, contributing to the evolution of culture and identity in our globalized world.
This lecture to be delivered by CYJO will address human migration through the lens of the Korean diaspora and the evolution of identity and culture through families with multiple backgrounds. KYOPO (2004-2009), a photographic and textual portrait that profiles over 200 people of Korean ethnicity, is a series on Korean immigration and the American experience touching on a myriad of topics – adoption, generational expectations, civic activity, etc. KYOPO was exhibited at The Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery (2011-2012) where select portraits are found in their permanent collection.
Featured Guest: cyjo
Born in 1974, CYJO (pronounced see-joe) is an American visual artist that works mainly in the photographic medium but also with text and video. She is most known for KYOPO (2004-2009), a photographic and textual project about American immigration and identity through the lens of the Korean ancestry. Over 200 people explore their relationships with their ancestral culture and the other cultures they embody through citizenship or life experiences.
Her first major work in China, Substructure (2010), is a photographic, video and textual portrait series documenting internal migration through 50 Chinese migrants in Beijing. Other China based works include Moment, Moving Moments (2012) and Blue Sky Day (2010-2015). Moment, Moving Moments is a video portrait of Dashilar expressed through the individual and its context where the relationship between modernization and tradition is observed. Blue Sky Day is a portrait of industrialization through Beijing’s sky. Coloration patterns of the sky are documented into monthly grids (34 months) in correspondence with the Air Quality Index provided by the Chinese Ministry of Environmental Protection. This portrait is realized through photography and a multi-sensory installation.
As an American of Korean ethnicity who has lived in various urban contexts (DC Metro Area, NYC, Beijing, Miami), CYJO analyzes different cultural nuances and sometimes contradicting perspectives with her body of work. She continues to explore how culture, life experience, tradition and modernity shape both the individual and collective identity and how society influences the alteration of tradition and culture.
CYJO’s work has been exhibited nationally and internationally, including: The Smithsonian’s National Portrait Gallery, Washington, D.C., Asia Society Texas Center, Houston, JANM Museum, Los Angeles, Venice Architecture Biennale, Venice, Three Shadows Photography Art Centre, Beijing, Minsheng Art Museum, Shanghai, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chengdu, Today Art Museum, Beijing, T. Art Center, Beijing, Liang Dian Design Center, Beijing, China Millennium Monument Museum of Digital Arts, Beijing, CFCCA, Manchester, Dalian Museum, The Art Atrium, London and The Korea Society, NYC. Her work has been featured in numerous publications and broadcast including A+A Magazine, La Repubblica, Slate, Conveyor Magazine, Stern, Vanity Fair, designboom, ELLE Korea, Eloquence Magazine, Global Times, Loeil De La Photographie, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, Smithsonian Magazine, The New York Times, Huffington Post, NBC News, CBS News and PBS Sunday Arts News. She has lectured at The Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery, Asia Society Texas Center Museum, Three Shadows Photography Art Centre, Chengdu MOCA, Dalian Museum, The Korea Society, Miami University, San Francisco State University, Today Art Museum, Oversees Korean Foundation and The Ruben Museum of Art.
CYJO's work is included in various private and public collections including The Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery.