Gwangju Freedom Artists Association
The Second Outdoor Exhibition—Ssitgimgut by Gwangju Freedom Artists Association, Leaflet, 1981, Image provided by Gim Jonggil

Gwangju Freedom Artists Association

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An art organization established in Gwangju and related to the early 1980s Minjung art movement. The Minjung art movement fought for art based on real life, in critique of the government-controlled art system and the art for art’s sake movement in the 1970s. The Gwangju Freedom Artists Association emphasized “art from the bottom”, art that can be created by public collaboration and appropriation, not by elites or art professionals. In September 1979, Hong Sungdam, Choi Youl, Kim Sanha, Lee Youngchae, Kim Yongchae, and Kang Daegyu prepared an exhibition. They later participated in the Gwangju Uprising in May 1980. They performed a shamanic ritual for cleansing a dead person's soul in the Nampyung Deudeulgang River in 1980, and also hosted outdoor exhibitions that commemorated the Gwangju Uprising in Songjeong-li, Gwangju in December 1981. The association opened the Citizens Art School in 1983 and engaged in a site-based art movement. The public print movement was expanded to Seoul, Seongnam, Incheon, Mokpo, and Iksan. In December 1985, its name was changed to the Visual Media Center. Their activities contributed to the foundation of the National Art Association (Minjok misul hyeopuihoe) in 1985.
* Source: Multilingual Glossary of Korean Art by Korea Arts Management Service

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