The collision of desire and art has sparked controversy over the physical doll works of the National Museum of Modern an
At the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (MMCA) in South Korea, some works exhibited at the 2020 Korean Artist Awards have been criticized for filming physical dolls.The works of visual artist Zheng Yunxi are part of the 2020 Korean Artist Award exhibition jointly organized by MMCA and SBS Foundation. Earlier this year, four visual artists were selected and their works were unveiled at the MMCA Seoul venue on December 4th.
Backstage of the 2020 Korean Artist Award (MMCA)
The center of controversy is the two-hour documentary "Tomorrow" and 14 photos depicting how physical dolls are produced and consumed.
The first part of the film shows a factory in China that produces physical dolls, mainly interviewing factory workers on how they work there and their thoughts as employees. A female employee confessed that she felt "a little guilty" about making physical dolls; The second part tells a story called Senji and Matsuda, who suggest that artificial intelligence robots should control society because human political systems have failed.
Visual artist Jung Yun suk's works at the 2020 Korean Artist Award (MMCA)
As soon as the exhibition opened, the museum's social media account received numerous comments about documentaries and photos. Some people said that physical dolls symbolize the objectification of women's sexuality, and it is inappropriate to publicly display photos of physical dolls.
A comment reads, "I believe the artwork displayed by this artist reflects the artist's personal wishes. What I want to say is that this artwork is more like sexual harassment than a work of art." Some people are calling on museums to remove these works from exhibitions.
Visual artist Jung Yun suk's works at the 2020 Korean Artist Award (MMCA)
The exhibition has now ended due to stricter epidemic prevention regulations by the Seoul City Government, and two venues of the museum in Seoul have also been closed. The Seoul and Dexiu Palace venues of the National Museum will remain closed until December 18th, while the other two venues, Gwangchuan in Gyeonggi Province and Cheongju in Chungcheongbuk do, will accept visitors through online bookings.
In response to growing criticism, the museum announced its position on social media on Tuesday, stating that the museum and artists hold different views when interpreting works.
Visual artist Jung Yun suk's installation work at the 2020 Korean Artist Award (MMCA)
A museum employee who declined to be named said, "We realize that the controversy surrounding these works is still ongoing, but it is not appropriate to withdraw them at the moment. The museum's responsibility is to accept various criticisms and opinions on the artwork."
"We hope that the audience will pay more attention to the information the artist is trying to convey through their work, rather than focusing on the theme itself."
--Reprinted from the public account: Entity doll combat experience