Dureong
Founding Exhibit for Misul dongin Dureong, Leaflet, 1984, MMCA Art Research Center Collection, Gift of Choi Youl

Dureong

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Dureong was an art group founded in 1982 primarily comprised of Hongik University alumni that emphasized the ideology of Minjung Art. The group particularly rejected the use of Western methods and individualism that were adopted by the art group Reality and Utterance [Hyunsilgwa bareon]. Instead, they sought to create ethnically Korean, contemporary grass-roots art and develop more populist methods of expression. They aimed to create art that was relevant to the everyday lives of contemporary people rather than “nihilistic and commercialized sick paintings.” Their name originated from their periodicals Live Paintings and Live Art. The Dureong focused on ordinary people to foster art work based on everyday lives with the aim to educate people’s cultural sensibility. They also conducted research into traditional folk art, which they assumed as the origin of Korean Minjung art, and inherited the legacy of this work, in terms of trying to produce an art history relevant to ordinary people. They also emphasized collaborative projects as a means to democratize art production. The group engaged in joint projects for grassroots art, the creation of murals and prints, and ethnically grounded Korean art education until 1987.
* Source: Multilingual Glossary of Korean Art. Korea Arts Management Service

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