Modern Women’s Eastern Paintings Exhibition
Modern Women’s Eastern Paintings Exhibition, Brochure, 1975, MMCA Art Research Center Collection

Modern Women’s Eastern Paintings Exhibition

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The Modern Women’s Eastern Paintings Exhibition was an invitational exhibition held from March 4 through 9, 1975 at Shinsegae Gallery. The Shinsagae Gallery stated that this exhibition was not just an exhibition simply intended to promote friendship among women artists, but an exhibition of selected female artists in their thirties who were active at the time, including three artists from each of the three art universities, namely, Seoul National University, Ewha Womans University, and Hongik University. The nine selected artists were Lee Insil, Hong Junghee, and Yang Jeongja from Seoul National University; Won Moonja, Oh Jungja, and Kim Jeonghui from Ewha Womans University; and Moon Eunhee, Kang Jaesun, and Lee Sookja from Hongik University. Except Kim Jeonghui, all the other artists had won multiple awards at the National Art Exhibition (Gukjeon). The displayed works were dominated by landscape paintings and bird-and-flower paintings, including Bird, A Cluster of Flowers, and Purple Flower by Kang Jaesun, Persimmon by Moon Eunhee, Sylvia and Riverside by Kim Jeonghui, Sunny Day and Lotus by Oh Jeongja, Afternoon and Monkey by Won Moonja, Mountain View from Suanbo, Rose, and Peacock by Hong Junghee. In the preface of the exhibition catalogue, Lee Kyungsung wrote that with the successive founding of women artists’ organizations, such as Woman Fine Arts Association [Yeoryu hwagahoe] in 1973 and Korean Sculptress Association in 1974, and the holding of a series of related exhibitions, “female artists, whose existence is faded or disconnected from dialogue by being sandwiched between male artists, have gathered and made their distinctive visual statements known to the world” and that the Modern Women’s Eastern Paintings Exhibition was designed in such an atmosphere. This exhibition is an example of how the art world still referred to women [yeoseong] artists as “yeoryu artists” in the 1970s.
* Source: MMCA

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