Age, Biography and Wiki

Park Chan-kyong was born on 1965 in Seoul, South Korea, is a South Korean media artist, filmmaker, and arts critic. Discover Park Chan-kyong's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 59 years old?

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Park Chan-kyong Height, Weight & Measurements

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Park Chan-kyong Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Park Chan-kyong worth at the age of 59 years old? Park Chan-kyong’s income source is mostly from being a successful Artist. He is from . We have estimated Park Chan-kyong's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
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Net Worth in 2023 Pending
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Timeline

1965

Park Chan-kyong (b. 1965 in Seoul, South Korea) is a South Korean media artist, filmmaker, and arts critic.

Park is known for his advocacy of the revival of minjung art in the 90s through both exhibition organizing and writing.

1988

After graduating from Seoul National University in 1988, Park was part of several collectives engaged with the legacy of minjung art, including the Art Criticism Research Group, Seongnam Project, and Art Space Pool.

He curated exhibitions and collaborated on projects that concerned Korea's rapidly changing urban space, as well as wrote extensively for publications like Forum A (which he cofounded) on theoretical issues about contemporary Korean art.

Park received a BFA in Western Painting from the College of Fine Arts at Seoul National University in 1988, and an MFA from the Photography and Media program at the California Institute of the Arts (Valencia, California) in 1995.

While at Cal Arts, Park studied with artist Allan Sekula and filmmaker Thom Anderson.

1990

Park's artistic practice from the late 1990s continued to engage with core questions minjung artists had raised decades prior about the relationship between politics and art.

1992

In addition to writing arts criticism, Park and the other critics organized a series of exhibitions in 1992 focused on Seoul's urban visual culture.

Along with Beck Jee-sook, Park curated the show "City Mass Culture (dosi daejung munhwa)" in 1992.

For the exhibition, Park presented an installation titled Life and Death of the Images (1992) composed of newspaper images of self-immolating protesters juxtaposed with souvenir photos of factory workers.

1997

With his first solo show in 1997, Park's career as a media artists working across photography, film, sculpture, and installation art took off, even as he continued to write criticism and curate shows.

His multimedia works often deal with traumatic moments in Korean modern and contemporary history (e.g. the splitting of the Korean peninsula), the relevance of tradition in the modern age, and the shifting role of spiritual practices like shamanism in contemporary Korea.

Park cofounded the monthly magazine Forum A in October 1997 with Jeon Yong-suk and a group of artists, curators and critics, whose numbers grew to over sixty over time.

The publication printed art criticism and translations of texts on art abroad in an effort to expand art discourse in the country.

Park was part of the artist collective Seongnam Project (성남프로젝트, Seongnampeurojekteu), whose members included Kim Tae-heon, Kim Hong-bin, Mah In-hwang, Park Yong-seok, Park Hye-yeon, Son Hye-min, Yoo Ju-ho, Cho Ji-eun, and Im Heung-soon.

The group focused on the relationship between art and public space in Seongnam, South Korea's first planned city, producing a range of works including documentary photography, a brochure, video, and installation art.

The collective came together when curator Lee Young-chul (who had also been a member of the Art Criticism Research Group) invited Park to participate in his upcoming show "98 City and Media: Clothing, Food House," at the Seoul City Museum of Art.

Park proposed to make a collective work, and along with artist Kim Tae-heon, invited the other members, who were graduates from universities in Seongnam and Anywang where Park lectured.

The group presented an installation at museum at Seoul, and presented a nearly identical version of the work at the Seongnam City Hall so Seongnam residents could see the installation as well.

Park was one of the founding members of Art Space Pool (대안공간 풀, Daeangonggan pul).

The collective of artists and critics, including those from Forum A, ran the alternative exhibition space in Seoul until April 2021.

For Park's first solo exhibition at the Kumho Museum of Art, the artist focused on representations of the Cold War in Korea.

The installation included a slide projector showing a series of mass media images along with his own memories of the Cold War.

Sets also featured a slide projection of 160 photographs.

The photographs depict three different sets.

2000

Park was closely involved with the efforts in the 90s and early 2000s to revive Minjung art as an artist and critic, leading art historian Shin Chunghoon to declare Park as part of the wave of "post-Minjung art".

Park wrote theoretical texts on the relationship between minjung art and modernism, founded publications like Forum A, and joined collectives like Art Criticism Research Group all in an effort to revitalize Minjung art.

Akin to earlier minjung artists and critics, Park has criticized Dansaekhwa and accused it of self-Orientalism.

Park was a member of the Art Criticism Research Group (미술비평연구회, Misulbipyeongyeongguhoe), a collective of critics whom Park described as the fourth generation of the Minjung art movement.

Park called for the redeployment of montage and kitsch in an effort to reformulate the techniques and goals of Minjung art during the period of its decline.

2008

He continued to explore the possibilities of utilizing documentary photography and archival material to examine the effects of Korea's rapid modernization with works like Sindoan (2008) and Manshin: Ten Thousand Spirits (2014).

2011

Together they won the Golden Bear at the Berlin International Film Festival in 2011 for their film Night Fishing (2011).

Both brothers were temporarily blacklisted by the South Korean Culture Ministry under president Park Geun-hye's administration.

The end of the blacklist has allowed Park Chan-kyong to resume his major film projects.

Park will also have his first solo show in the US at the National Museum of Asian Art at the Smithsonian at the end of 2023.

Park still lives and works in Seoul.

Park was born and raised in Seoul with older brother Park Chan-wook.

They were brought up as Catholic.

2014

Through his curation of Mediacity Seoul 2014, Park attempted to expand his thinking to consider how artists across Asia utilize similar techniques and imagery to engage with trauma, leading him to continue drawing on the phrase "Asian Gothic" (a term he coined in 2007) in his writing.

Park has exhibited extensively at home and abroad—sometimes together with his brother filmmaker Park Chan-wook under the moniker PARKing CHANce.