The China Mail - South Korea's chainsaw artist carves a name for herself at 91

USD -
AED 3.672504
AFN 64.503991
ALL 81.277337
AMD 374.792985
ANG 1.789884
AOA 918.000367
ARS 1368.812858
AUD 1.393704
AWG 1.80125
AZN 1.70397
BAM 1.661047
BBD 2.017495
BDT 123.155973
BGN 1.668102
BHD 0.377935
BIF 2978.470423
BMD 1
BND 1.274789
BOB 6.921738
BRL 4.980804
BSD 1.001741
BTN 92.955964
BWP 13.440061
BYN 2.845131
BYR 19600
BZD 2.014608
CAD 1.37785
CDF 2310.000362
CHF 0.781647
CLF 0.022275
CLP 888.623721
CNY 6.81775
CNH 6.81664
COP 3612.042974
CRC 456.834685
CUC 1
CUP 26.5
CVE 93.647289
CZK 20.634504
DJF 178.377001
DKK 6.352304
DOP 60.053505
DZD 132.66041
EGP 51.884156
ERN 15
ETB 156.407066
EUR 0.849404
FJD 2.218304
FKP 0.737751
GBP 0.739426
GEL 2.703861
GGP 0.737751
GHS 11.068835
GIP 0.737751
GMD 73.503851
GNF 8788.483587
GTQ 7.660623
GYD 209.571532
HKD 7.83905
HNL 26.615143
HRK 6.404704
HTG 131.173298
HUF 307.310388
IDR 17140
ILS 2.95979
IMP 0.737751
INR 92.60245
IQD 1312.242558
IRR 1321500.000352
ISK 122.070386
JEP 0.737751
JMD 158.376152
JOD 0.70904
JPY 158.630385
KES 129.103801
KGS 87.450384
KHR 4006.964202
KMF 418.00035
KPW 900.016021
KRW 1467.040383
KWD 0.30836
KYD 0.83477
KZT 469.692981
LAK 22100.301499
LBP 89702.068028
LKR 316.633403
LRD 184.313559
LSL 16.418192
LTL 2.95274
LVL 0.60489
LYD 6.334027
MAD 9.242091
MDL 17.219415
MGA 4154.741178
MKD 52.350418
MMK 2100.011828
MNT 3575.508238
MOP 8.080173
MRU 40.038218
MUR 46.290378
MVR 15.460378
MWK 1736.973969
MXN 17.311104
MYR 3.952504
MZN 63.955039
NAD 16.418192
NGN 1342.480377
NIO 36.859315
NOK 9.368704
NPR 148.729882
NZD 1.700392
OMR 0.384504
PAB 1.001741
PEN 3.446261
PGK 4.342435
PHP 59.564038
PKR 279.298569
PLN 3.59435
PYG 6381.587329
QAR 3.65196
RON 4.330404
RSD 99.664529
RUB 76.231517
RWF 1463.671493
SAR 3.751456
SBD 8.035647
SCR 15.058814
SDG 601.000339
SEK 9.164404
SGD 1.270104
SHP 0.746601
SLE 24.625038
SLL 20969.496166
SOS 572.508387
SRD 37.706038
STD 20697.981008
STN 20.807678
SVC 8.764703
SYP 110.597048
SZL 16.413436
THB 32.120369
TJS 9.446006
TMT 3.505
TND 2.907215
TOP 2.40776
TRY 44.827504
TTD 6.803686
TWD 31.480367
TZS 2599.430974
UAH 44.099112
UGX 3709.711665
UYU 39.848826
UZS 12155.930188
VES 479.657038
VND 26335
VUV 117.475878
WST 2.715253
XAF 557.099665
XAG 0.012375
XAU 0.000207
XCD 2.70255
XCG 1.805342
XDR 0.692853
XOF 557.099665
XPF 101.286679
YER 238.603589
ZAR 16.316204
ZMK 9001.203584
ZMW 19.057285
ZWL 321.999592
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • BCC

    4.2400

    83.04

    +5.11%

  • RELX

    0.4700

    36.68

    +1.28%

  • CMSD

    0.1800

    23.08

    +0.78%

  • RYCEF

    0.5600

    17.66

    +3.17%

  • BCE

    -0.0700

    24.09

    -0.29%

  • CMSC

    0.1500

    22.77

    +0.66%

  • GSK

    1.2200

    58.35

    +2.09%

  • RIO

    0.4400

    100.15

    +0.44%

  • NGG

    -0.6000

    86.92

    -0.69%

  • JRI

    0.1800

    13.09

    +1.38%

  • AZN

    4.3300

    204.8

    +2.11%

  • VOD

    -0.2200

    15.48

    -1.42%

  • BP

    -3.0400

    44.59

    -6.82%

  • BTI

    0.5400

    56.68

    +0.95%

South Korea's chainsaw artist carves a name for herself at 91
South Korea's chainsaw artist carves a name for herself at 91 / Photo: © AFP

South Korea's chainsaw artist carves a name for herself at 91

South Korean sculptor Kim Yun Shin wields a chainsaw with a quiet focus, refining a craft the 91-year-old has honed over decades spent far from home.

Text size:

Long overlooked in her home country, Kim has more recently gained recognition as a pioneering artist, featuring in a sweeping retrospective at South Korea's esteemed Hoam Museum of Art.

The solo exhibition, titled "Two Be One", is the institution's first since its founding in 1982 to spotlight a woman artist, and includes some of her signature abstract sculptures hewn from hardwood with her tool of choice.

"The saw is my body," Kim told AFP in her studio in Paju, a city northwest of the capital Seoul.

"When I lift it and cut (the wood), it has to move exactly like me -- the saw has to become me, and I have to become the saw."

Hoam is exhibiting about 170 of Kim's sculptures and paintings, reflecting her reverence for nature and blending spirituality with meditations on existence, material and form.

Born in 1935 in Wonsan, now in North Korea, she grew up playing alone in the countryside, talking to trees and rice paddies, and making eyeglasses out of sorghum stalks.

At the time, Korea was under Japanese colonial rule. Kim saw her older brother disappear after joining the independence movement, and pine trees in her town cut down for fuel.

"Those trees were my friends," she said, recalling the pain of seeing them uprooted -- and her drive to salvage and transform them into works of sculpture.

"I think I wanted them to endure -- to keep living on within that (art) form. Maybe that's why I've loved working with wood so much."

- Chainsaw carving -

Kim's family fled south during the horrors of the Korean War, and she later studied in France before returning to become an art professor in Seoul.

South Korea was then under a brutal military dictatorship. Authorities held artists in suspicion: a friend of Kim's was interrogated simply for using red, a colour associated with North Korean communism.

"Women, in particular, were virtually invisible," she told AFP, noting that her superiors would comment on the length of her skirt and tell her to refrain from smoking on college campuses.

At 48, drawn by the abundant trees in Argentina, she made the unusual choice to move to the South American nation, then just restoring democracy after a dictatorship of its own.

She ended up staying for 40 years, taking up chainsaw carving.

Kim focused on dense, durable wood such as palo santo and"algarrobo", and also worked with quarries in Mexico and Brazil, experimenting with stone sculpture using materials such as onyx and sodalite.

She managed to forge her "own artistic world, nourished by the country's culture and nature", Tae Hyun-sun, senior curator at Hoam, told AFP.

- Pave the way -

Like many women artists of her generation, Kim has only recently gained global recognition, said Rachel Lehmann, the co-founder of Lehmann Maupin which represents Kim internationally and has shown her work in London and New York.

"Her perseverance and lifelong dedication have helped pave the way for subsequent generations of women artists," she told AFP.

Kim returned to South Korea after a major 2023 solo show in Seoul that propelled her to the Venice Biennale the following year.

Among her former mentees in Buenos Aires is Korean-Argentine filmmaker Cecilia Kang, 40, an award-winning director who is now making a film about her.

As the daughter of Korean immigrants, she felt pressure to follow a conventional path, but Kim -- whom Kang first met when she was 13 -- showed her "that pursuing a life doing what one loves is possible".

At 15, Kim, who was a war refugee, changed her name to Yun Shin – "truth and faith" – on the advice of a monk who urged her to spend her life discovering her "true colour".

Those words have always "stayed vivid with me", she said. "Sometimes I feel they are what have carried me through this life."

N.Lo--ThChM