Bang Haija
Bang Haija, Heaven-Earth, 2011, Natural pigment on paper on panel, 181(diameter), MMCA collection

Bang Haija

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Bang Haija (1937-2022) was an abstract artist who has spent her life making “light” visible and has lived going back and forth between Seoul and Paris. Born in Neung-dong, Goyang-gun, Gyeonggi-do Province, Bang graduated from Kyunggi Girls’ High School and went on study in the College of Fine Arts at Seoul National University. After graduation, she traveled to France with a plane ticket to Paris that she bought by selling her works at her first solo exhibition in 1961. She submitted her In the Heart of the Earth I and II to the exhibition The Foreign Painters in Paris (Les Peintres étrangers a Paris) hosted by Museum of Modern Art in Paris (Musée d'Art moderne de Paris). She enrolled in the École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris, studied mural painting in the atelier of Professor Lenormand from 1963 through 1966, and held a solo exhibition at Galerie Florence Houston-Brown in Paris in 1968. From 1983 through 1987, she learned printmaking at the Parisian printmaking studio Atelier 17, where she developed a sense for paper texture and contemporaneous mediums. Since 1976, she held several solo exhibitions at Gallery Hyundai in Seoul and traveled between Seoul and Paris, where she participated in a residency program at Youngeun Museum of Contemporary Art, held an exhibition at Sungkok Art Museum, and taught calligraphy and Hangeul (Korean alphabet) to French people. Her books of paintings include Bang Hai Ja and Souffle de Lumière (Breath of Light) published by the French publisher Cercle d’art in 1997 and 2007, respectively, and Song of Light published by Youlhwadang in 2015. Among notable books of poetry accompanied by her paintings are Au chant des transparences (To the Song of Transparency) by Roselyne Sibille (Voix d’encre, 2001), Une joie secrète (A Secret Joy) by Charles Juliet (Voix d’encre, 2002), Infinite Flowers by Mun Yeonghun (Yeobaek Media, 2004), and Éclosion (Hatching) by Kim Chi Ha (Voix d’encre, 2006). She also published essay collections such as Maeumui chimmuk (Silence of the Mind) (Yeobaek Media, 2001) and Agiga bon sesang (The World as Seen by a Baby) (Yeobaek Media, 2002). Her translations introducing Korean cultural heritage to France include Namsan Mountain in Gyeongju: The Mountain of Ten Thousand Buddhas (Cercle d’Art, 2002) and the Les Mille Monts de Lune (The Thousand Mountains of the Moon) (Albin Michel, 2003), a collection of Zen poems by Korean Buddhist monks. Bang was awarded the Holy Prize at the International Contemporary Art Fair Monaco, Special Overseas Artist Award at the Second Korean Artist Prize in 2008, the Order of Cultural Merit of the Republic of Korea in 2010, and the Eleventh France-Korea Cultural Prize and the Prize for Women Who Have Made the World Shine from the Korean Women’s International Foundation in 2012. Bang Haija is known as the “painter of light” as she explored and visualized the meaning of the universe and life through meditation. In 2023, the memorial exhibition for the first anniversary of her death was held at Youngeun Museum of Contemporary Art.
* Source: MMCA

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