Artist Sohee Cho’s photo series “Garden Balsam Prayers 304” shows the praying hands of 304 volunteers - the number of victims of the 2014 Sewol ferry sinking. The series is part of an exhibition at the Gyeonggi Museum of Modern Art that starts Saturday. [GYEONGGI MUSEUM OF MODERN ART] |
And at the nearby Gyeonggi Museum of Modern Art will be shown diverse artworks, ranging from a painting by Park Eun-tae that depicts the families of Sewol victims desperately waiting for the rescue of their loved ones at Paengmok Harbor to an installation piece made of various objects found at the port by artist Soun Hong.
They form the exhibition “April, the Eternal Voyage” organized by the museum in memory of the Sewol tragedy. A total of 22 artists participated in the exhibition which starts on Saturday - exactly two years after the disastrous accident caused the loss of 304 people including 250 Danwon High School students.
“About two-thirds of the exhibits have never been shown to the public before,” Choi Eun-ju, director of the museum, said at a press conference last week. “A half of them were commissioned by us for the exhibition. The other half had been created and kept privately by some artists. They were so shocked and depressed by the accident that they couldn’t help creating something about it, while not knowing they would show the works to others later.”
According to the director, the museum has had strong ties with the families of the Sewol victims. At their request, the museum has let part of its space be used for an association of the families and government officials dispatched for the funeral procedures.
Many of the exhibits are touching and lyrical. On a black wall of a dark room are 304 twinkling points of light just like stars in the night sky or “The Faces of Heaven,” which is the title of the installation.