Lee Kyusang
Lee Kyusang, Composition, Oil on canvas, 69.5x55.7cm. MMCA collection

Lee Kyusang

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Lee Kyusang (1918-1967) was born in Seoul, the son of a wealthy furniture merchant. He graduated from Whimoon High School and moved to Japan. He submitted his abstract works to the Geukyeonsa coterie exhibition in 1937 and the Exhibition of Jiyu Bijutsuka Kyokai in 1939. In 1941, he attended the Department of Painting at Nihon Art School in Japan, but it is not clear if he graduated. After independence, he participated in the New Realism Group Inaugural Exhibition in 1948, the Contemporary Art Exhibit sponsored by Chosun Ilbo in 1957, and from 1959 to 1963. He taught art at Kyungbok High School and was appointed as an associate professor at Hongik University in 1961. Lee Kyusang was one of Korea's early abstract artists. He consistently focused on abstract art while his colleagues, such as Kim Whanki and Yoo Youngkuk, switched to semi-abstraction. In the 1950s, he incorporated religious symbols, such as a transformed cross, into his work after he converted to Catholicism, as a means to create simple yet profound pieces of work.
* Source: Multilingual Glossary of Korean Art. Korea Arts Management Service

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