Tag Archives: Kukje Gallery

Frieze and NADA New York’s Early Sales Signal Buyer Confidence

Jeff Koons’s Hulk sculptures dominated Gagosian’s booth. © Jeff Koons, Incredible Hulk ™, and © Marvel. All rights reserved. Photo: Maris Hutchinson Courtesy Gagosian

Frieze officially took flight yesterday (May 7) with its VIP preview, kicking off a jam-packed art week in New York, where no fewer than nine fairs are unfolding ahead of the marquee May evening auctions. The fair opened just days after news broke of its acquisition by Endeavor’s former CEO Ari Emanuel, in a deal reportedly worth $200 million, and in the midst of turbulence stirred by an erratic 100-day-old presidency, where trade wars and cultural grandstanding have become the new normal. Still, early sales suggest a market that’s holding steady—albeit one that’s more cautious, more curated and leagues away from the sold-out-at-entry frenzy of years past. As the aisles rapidly filled in the fair’s first hours, most works were still available, with dealers far more open to quiet negotiations, even for formerly too-hot-to-touch names. With Asian collectors largely absent and a notable number of Europeans skipping New York altogether, it was American buyers who showed up, browsed and—crucially—bought, perhaps sensing that now is the moment to make their move.

Held once again at The Shed in the heart of Chelsea’s gallery grid, Frieze New York has positioned itself more like a boutique fair than the sprawling showcases staged in its international iterations. This year’s edition features sixty-five exhibitors from twenty-five countries, though several New York mainstays—assumedly wary of economic crosswinds—opted instead for Independent, TEFAF or bypassed the fairs entirely to focus on in-house programming. “We’re just a few blocks from the fairs, and we decided to focus on our exhibitions; it’s been working. People are stopping by on their way,” Eric Gleason of Kasmin told Observer. On preview day, the gallery opened a solo show of ethereal, mystical works by L.A.-based painter Theodora Allen, and nearly half were already placed by that evening.

The mega galleries that did show up largely opted for single-artist spotlights or tightly curated presentations. At Pace, Adam Pendleton took center stage in a thoughtful pairing with works by Lynda Benglis, highlighting parallels in their layered explorations of materiality and process. The strategy paid off: at the day’s end, the gallery had sold multiple Benglis pieces in the $275,000-300,000 range, while six of Pendleton’s paintings were placed within the first few hours, priced between $165,000 and $425,000. The presentation dovetailed with Pendleton’s solo exhibition at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C., and followed the high-profile announcement that MoMA had acquired all thirty-five works from his 2021-2022 survey.

Pace at Frieze. Sebastiano Pellion di Persano

Meanwhile, Gagosian seemed intent on flexing its muscles this season, perhaps to reassure collectors of its continued dominance. Fresh off celebrating Larry’s eightieth birthday, the gallery opened not one but two museum-grade shows: “Willem de Kooning” in Chelsea and the Paloma Picasso–curated “Picasso: Tête-à-tête” exhibition uptown—while anchoring its Frieze booth with a bombastic display of Jeff Koons’s Hulk Elvis sculptures. The three inflatable-looking polychrome steel sculptures, set against a fleshy immersive vinyl backdrop, brought full Koonsian crowd-catching Pop playfulness. That day, the gallery reported selling one piece for an undisclosed price—though auction precedent suggests it landed most likely around $3 million, as a six-foot Hulk (Friends) fetched $3.4 million at Phillips New York in 2019. “The fair is off to a great start, and the response to our booth has been phenomenal,” senior director Millicent Wilner told the press, noting strong interest in the remaining two sculptures. The presentation could signal a homecoming for Koons, who left both Gagosian and David Zwirner for Pace in 2021—only to appear now back in Larry’s court.

Nearby, David Zwirner also took a focused approach, devoting the entire booth to a postmodern wink at early twentieth-century iconography through the lens of Pictures Generation pioneer Sherrie Levine. The presentation included the debut of her 2024 series After Piet Mondrian Inverted, a characteristically sly reversal of modernist canon, with prices ranging from $150,000 to $200,000.

Hauser & Wirth, never one to play it small, reported confident early sales—including a $1.2 million monumental work by Rashid Johnson, strategically placed at the booth’s entrance as Johnson is currently the subject of a significant career survey at the Guggenheim, which opened just a few weeks ago. By afternoon, the gallery had reportedly placed more than twenty-five works, with prices ranging from $20,000 to $1.2 million. Additional sales included works by other artists with strong institutional momentum—Jack Whitten, Amy Sherald, Lorna Simpson, Mary Heilmann, Roni Horn and Thomas J Price, among others. “The crowd and conversations today have been incredibly upbeat,” Hauser & Wirth president Marc Payot told the press. “Perhaps most significantly, the energy this first day at the fair has been amazingly optimistic—we’re seeing an even more robust commitment now on the part of collectors, curators and institutions to the story of art in this moment.”

Among the more headline-grabbing day-one sales, White Cube placed a large, emotionally raw Tracey Emin canvas for £1.2 million and one of her bronzes for £80,000. The gallery also moved a lyrical work by Etel Adnan for $180,000 and two Antony Gormley sculptures for £325,000 each. A Christine Ay Tjoe painting was acquired by an institution for $280,000—unsurprising given the artist’s recent auction ascent—while two vibrant works by Ilana Savdie, priced in the $100,000 range, found buyers as well. The sales followed the artist’s New York solo debut with the gallery, her first since joining the roster in 2022.

Austrian dealer Thaddaeus Ropac was still holding firm on a monumental upside-down George Baselitz canvas priced at €1 million by the end of preview day. But sales elsewhere were brisk: a €85,000 painting by Martha Jungwirth, a $210,000 Joan Snyder, two Megan Rooney works at £18,000 each and a $130,000 David Salle acquired by a U.S. collector. Ropac also placed a more conceptually driven work by Liza Lou for $225,000.

Next door at Karma, the action was just as lively. The gallery placed a haunting Gertrude Abercrombie painting for $350,000 and a $90,000 oil by Maja Ruznic, fresh off her Whitney Biennial appearance. Other confirmed sales included a Richard Mayhew for $350,000, a Manoucher Yektai for $275,000, a Reggie Burrows Hodges for $175,000, a sculpture by Alan Saret for $150,000 and a punchy, Pop-catchy work by Calvin Marcus for $135,000.

Further down the aisle, Perrotin reported a complete sell-out of its new psychologically dense paintings by Claire Tabouret, with prices ranging from $65,000 to $200,000. Nearby, Nara Roesler also moved multiple works, including a textile piece by Sheila Hicks for $74,000, a work by Marcelo Silveira for $65,000 and an oil painting by Tomie Ohtake for $350,000—riding the momentum of her sold-out booth at last year’s Art Basel Paris.

Frieze New York 2025 opened at the Shed on May 7 in VIP preview. Casey Kelbaugh/CKA

Korean dealer Tina Kim reported strong first-day sales of works by artists with notable institutional traction, including a $150,000 piece by Filipino American artist Pacita Abad, placed alongside a $200,000 work by Lee ShinJa, a Ghada Amer for $175,000, a sculpture by Suki Seokyeong Kang for $80,000 and a new piece by Maia Ruth Lee for $25,000. Not far away, her mother’s gallery, Kukje, also saw a robust day, reportedly placing several works by Dansaekhwa master Park Seo-Bo in the $250,000-300,000 range, following the artist’s passing last year. Additional sales included works by Kyungah Ham ($140,000-168,000), Kibong Rhee ($80,000-96,000) and a Haegue Yang priced between €35,000 and €42,000.

Meanwhile, Goodman Gallery confirmed the placement of a major Carrie Mae Weems work for $100,000—already earmarked for a European institution—along with a Pamela Phatsimo Sunstrum for $90,000 and a Ravelle Pillay painting for £35,000. Nearby, Brazilian powerhouse Fortes D’Aloia & Gabriel capitalized on the momentum of Beatriz Milhazes’s current Guggenheim show, selling several of her works in the $45,000-60,000 range. The gallery also placed pieces by Wanda Pimentel ($45,000-60,000), Tadáskía ($25,000-40,000) and Antonio Tarsis, whose meticulously composed wood constructions sold for $40,000 to $55,000.

The demand for more ambitious presentations

The appetite for museum-caliber work was evident at Frieze’s preview. Mendes Wood DM placed the entirety of Kishio Suga’s Sliced Stones installation—eight sculptures priced between $200,000 and $300,000—without much hesitation from buyers. James Cohan also reported strong institutional traction, selling several of Tuan Andrew Nguyen’s Calder-esque, organically suspended metal mobiles, priced from $85,000 to $185,000, to a European museum, an American institution and a private collector—riding the momentum of the Vietnamese artist’s breakout U.S. institutional debut at the New Museum in summer 2023. Meanwhile, New York dealer Casey Kaplan devoted the entire booth to Hannah Levy’s alluring, hybrid biomorphic sculptures, and collectors responded accordingly. Several works, priced between $45,000 and $80,000, were swiftly snapped up as Levy’s profile continues to rise—fueled in part by her showing in the 2022 Venice Biennale.

Tuan Andrew Nguyen presented by James Cohan at Frieze. Casey Kelbaugh/CKA

Even the more dynamic and occasionally experimental offerings in the Focus section inspired a strong response. Showing at Frieze for the first time, Parisian and research-centred gallery Sultana reported selling three works by Jean Claracq in the $20,000-30,000 range and two humorously playful works by Turner Prize artist Jesse Darling for €10,000 each. Nearby, Chapter NY captured collectors’ attention, placing multiple works by Milano Chow, priced between $16,000 and $20,000, and Mary Stephenson, with prices ranging from £4,500 to £32,000.

Among the most ambitious presentations in the Focus section was a multimedia installation by Yehwan Song, exploring the discomfort and incommunicability of digital media and online spaces. Presented by Seoul-based G Gallery, the work was acquired by a private institution for $22,000. Leaning further into the multimedia and installation spectrum, London-based Public Gallery made its New York debut with an interactive, video game–based installation by Danielle Brathwaite-Shirley that confronts Black trans experiences head-on. Blending reality, gaming, technology and speculative fiction, the artist builds choose-your-own-adventure narratives that compel users to face uncomfortable questions around transphobia and racism—dismantling ethical complacency while centering responsibility, sincerity and care.

Luana Vitra presented by Mitre Galeria at Frieze. Courtesy of the gallery

In the same section, marking its New York debut, São Paulo–based Mitre Gallery presented a solo booth of spiritual, totemic sculptures by Brazilian artist Luana Vitra, who also just opened a solo show at SculptureCenter. Drawing on the history and cosmology of Minas Gerais—the mineral-rich region where she was raised—Vitra explores the metallurgical symbolism and transformative power of minerals to reveal the “spirit in matter.” Her sculptures function as vessels designed to receive, store and transmit energy—works that blur the line between material object and metaphysical conduit. By the end of preview day, the gallery had placed four of Vitra’s pieces, priced between $12,000 and $26,000.

Another standout in the section was the U.S. debut of Indonesian artist Citra Sasmita, presented by Singapore-based Yeo Workshop. Ancestral symbologies unfold in mystical, charged images that explore a visceral and spiritual interconnection between the female body and nature—rendered here in a textile-based installation that seems to transcend the fair’s commercial setting and drift into otherworldly terrain. Titled Vortex in the Land of Liberation, the installation centers on a vertically suspended, embroidered cowhide that uses the traditional Kamasan painting technique and invokes folkloric spirits to evoke feminine power, fertility and the primordial. Drawing from ancient Balinese literature, mythology and iconography, Sasmita creates a personal cosmology that asserts a form of female agency and spirituality in harmony with the cosmos. With prices ranging from $20,000 to $38,000, the presentation aligns with a major Barbican commission in London and the artist’s participation in both the Hawai‘i Triennial ALOHA NŌ and the 16th Sharjah Biennial.

Citra Sasmita’s Vortex in the Land of Liberation presented by Yeo Workshop at Frieze. Courtesy of the artist

Nearby, Bogotá- and Paris-based gallery mor charpentier reported a sold-out solo presentation of Malo Chapuy, whose haunting, jewel-toned paintings draw heavily from Gothic and pre-Renaissance religious art, echoed in the gold leaf backgrounds that transport the subjects to otherworldly levels while channeling a spiritual austerity in new sacred forms refracted through a distinctly contemporary lens. Prices ranged from €12,000 to €22,000, and the swift sales spoke to collectors’ appetite for works that bridge historical gravitas and emerging talent. Further signaling buyer confidence across price points, young L.A. gallerist Matthew Brown also racked up a strong first day of sales, including a mesmerizing Blair Whiteford painting for $45,000, a new work by Kenturah Davis for $40,000 and a TARWUK sculpture for $40,000, along with additional acquisitions such as Vincent Valdez at $45,000, Michelle Uckotter at $25,000 and pieces by rising voices like Olivia van Kuiken ($18,000) and Jack O’Brien ($12,000).

Emerging artists and first-time exhibitors find footing at NADA

Opening in sync with Frieze this year, NADA dealers reported a brisk and in many cases gratifying first day. Now housed in the Starrett-Lehigh Building on Twenty-Sixth Street—a convenient five-minute stroll from Frieze—the fair’s eleventh New York edition brought together one hundred eleven exhibitors, including fifty-four first-timers.

A scene from NADA New York’s VIP Preview. Kevin Czopek/BFA.com

Among the newcomers, London-based gallery Alice Amati sold out its solo presentation of enigmatic, hyperrealist paintings by Danielle Fretwell, priced between $5,000 and $17,000. Fellow Londoner Chilli Projects also had a standout debut, placing every work in its booth by day’s end. The poetic, fragmented meditations on identity and displacement by New Haven–based artist Christopher Paul Jordan, priced between $4,000 and $20,000, found eager buyers. Jordan is currently in residence at Titus Kaphar’s NXTHVN and will show next with James Cohan.

From the West Coast, Los Angeles–based de Boer placed several of Noelia Towers’s unsettling, cinematic figurative works ($10,000-40,000), alongside pieces by Kat Lowish ($6,000) and a large-scale canvas by Rachel Sharpe ($14,000). Minneapolis- and now New York–based HAIR + NAILS also moved early, placing three dreamlike paintings by Julia García. Meanwhile, Rachel Liu Gallery (formerly Rachel Uffner, now in partnership with Lucy Liu) sold two works by Sheree Hovsepian priced at $28,000 and $24,000, tied to the artist’s solo show that opened just ahead of the fair.

Danielle Fretwell presented by Alice Amati at NADA. Photo Gabriele Abbruzzese

The newly launched Chozick Family Art Gallery—helmed by former Uffner sales director Rebekah Chozick—had a promising start, selling several works on day one by Sofía Del Mar Collins, Raphael Griswold and Andrea McGinty, as well as completing a late-evening sale of a work by Sara Gimenez. Another newcomer, MAMA Projects, placed six intimately scaled paintings by Chinese artist Zhi Ding, whose work interrogates the globalization of the American Dream. In NADA’s sculpture section, the gallery also showed Body in trouble (2025), a haunting creature by Nicky Cherry that exists in a liminal space between embodiment and disembodiment, prodding at the fragility of identity as a fixed concept.

Buenos Aires gallery CONSTITUCIÓN brought a quietly stunning solo presentation of Carlos Cima’s moody, intimate domestic scenes, selling out all nine works by day’s end. Another standout came from EMBAJADA, with a booth devoted entirely to Puerto Rican world-builder Joshua Nazario. With his distinctly DIY-meets-Pop aesthetic, Nazario reworks concrete, wood and other industrial materials into sculptures and flat works that slyly dissect status-signaling and emulative behaviors in Puerto Rican life.

Havana-based El Apartamento offered a deeply material meditation on memory and history through Eloy Arribas’s solo booth. His works—priced between $3,200 and $5,800—were generated using the strappo technique, where wax molds capture, layer and distort painted marks over time. Each drawing is tied to a visual genealogy, bearing faint echoes of its predecessors, as figuration gradually dissolves into obfuscation, emergence and erasure. A couple of works had sold by midday.

Longtime NADA exhibitor Kates-Ferri Project (New York) found success with a tight dialogue on geometric abstraction and analog aesthetics, presenting paintings by Uruguayan conceptual artist Guillermo Garcia Cruz and sculptures by Martín Touzon. Two of Garcia Cruz’s paintings sold during the preview, with strong interest in Touzon’s work reported.

Joshua Nazario presented by EMBAJADA at NADA. Photo Luis Corzo | Courtesy the artist and EMBAJADA San Juan

The new tariff threat didn’t discourage South Korean and Japanese galleries, which also showed up in force to the fair this year. A-Lounge Contemporary presented recent Columbia MFA grads Youngmin Park and Ian Ha, placing two of Ha’s works by the evening. Kyoto-based COHJU made its NADA debut with three rising Japanese artists—Takuya Otsuki, Anna Yamanishi and Shu Okamoto—all engaging with the interplay between traditional forms and contemporary expression.

Mexico City–based galleries also had strong momentum at NADA. Third Born, a recently opened gallery, placed several small, poetic canvases by Korean artist Jungwon Ja Hur, whose quiet, existential tone was complemented by ceramics and delicate fabric works inspired by bujagi tradition—all priced under $5,000. Nearby, JO-HS placed four dreamlike paintings by Melissa Rios, whose layered reflections on human connection struck a chord. Naranjo 141, another young Mexico City gallery, made its New York debut in the TD Bank Curated Spotlight with new textile works by New York–based Pauline Shaw. Her intricate tapestries—priced at $11,500 and $8,750—use the metaphor of woven fiber to probe belief systems, emotion and the murky enigma of the natural world. Both works sold on opening day to new clients.

While several collectors admitted to Observer they were waiting to see what Independent had to offer before locking in additional buys, NADA’s preview day signaled an encouraging dynamism. We may no longer be seeing the sold-out stampede of years past, but the fair continues to demonstrate the market’s appetite for emerging voices—and its ability to adapt with resilience to what feel like continuous market shifts.

Frieze New York and NADA New York run through Sunday, May 11, 2025.



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Tina Kim On Dansaekhwa, Diplomacy and Effective Canon Building

Tina Kim has emerged as a key force in elevating Korean modern and contemporary art on the global stage. Photos by Vincent Tullo | Courtesy Tina Kim Gallery

Few people—aside from perhaps her mother—have played as pivotal a role in positioning South Korea on the global art map as New York-based dealer Tina Kim. Born in California, Kim was immersed in the art world from an early age, accompanying her mother, Hyun-Sook Lee, on artist visits and exhibition tours, and actively contributing to the organization of exhibitions and publications. Lee is the founder of Kukje Gallery in Seoul—arguably South Korea’s most influential gallery—which is where Kim began her career, helping to mount exhibitions for some of contemporary art’s most established names, including Louise Bourgeois, Roni Horn, Anish Kapoor, Alexander Calder, Jean-Michel Basquiat and Joan Mitchell. These early experiences laid the foundation for what would become a groundbreaking international career.

The 1980s marked a period of rapid economic growth in South Korea, driven by post-dictatorship modernization efforts after 1979. As the 1988 Olympics approached, the government recognized the cultural and diplomatic potential of the arts to enhance the country’s global profile. That moment coincided with the rise of Kukje Gallery and marked a new chapter for the Korean art ecosystem. In the decades since, South Korea’s creative industries—especially pop culture—have fueled a global surge in visibility, with the so-called “Korean Wave” extending well beyond K-pop and K-dramas to include contemporary Korean art, which has increasingly captured international attention and acclaim.

An installation view of “Suki Seokyeong Kang: Mountain—Hour—Face” at MCA Denver. Courtesy the artist and MCA Denver. Photo: Wes Magyar

Still, Kim chose to put down roots in New York after her studies, driven by a desire to carve out her own identity in the art world. “I wanted to have something that was mine,” Kim tells Observer when we catch up with her ahead of the spring art fairs. This year marks the tenth anniversary of the opening of her brick-and-mortar space in Chelsea.

Kim’s gallery first opened on 57th Street in 2002, taking over a space once occupied by London’s storied Anthony d’Offay Gallery, known for its ambitious presentations of artists like Joseph Beuys, Cindy Sherman and Gilbert & George. “Anthony was somebody I had worked very closely with on many exhibitions,” Kim recalls, adding that she initially continued her collaboration with Kukje Gallery. “I continued working closely with my mother, mainly in the secondary market, and geared towards the needs of the market in Korea. I was often going to auctions or helping with institutional exhibitions in the States.”

She admits that her mother was initially less than thrilled about her decision to open an independent gallery rather than remain fully involved in the family business. She worried that her daughter would be “literally throwing herself into the shark tank” of New York’s notoriously competitive art scene and feared the move might spark unnecessary tensions with American colleagues, since many of the artists Kim hoped to work with already had representation in New York.

SEE ALSO: Taipei Dangdai Director Robin Peckham Talks Art, Ambition and Taiwan’s Global Rise

A fundamental shift came in 2015, when Kim moved to her current space in Chelsea, debuting with “Happy Together,” an exhibition curated by Clara Kim, now chief curator at L.A. MOCA, featuring a broad constellation of Asian artists responding to social and political tensions in the region. “That show really set the future direction of the gallery,” Kim recalls. “I was interested in presenting artists who are relevant to the current political and cultural moment—artists making an impact and speaking across borders.”

Before launching her own program, Kim worked at Paula Cooper Gallery, which is now just next door. “It’s nice that Paula often visits my gallery and compliments my shows,” Kim adds. “I think it’s very meaningful for me that I am on 21st Street.”

Park Seo-Bo (far left) and Lee Ufan (second from left) at the opening of the Indépendants exhibition in 1972. Courtesy of PARKSEOBO FOUNDATION

Notably, 2015 also marked the opening of the Dansaekhwa collateral exhibition at the 56th Venice Biennale, which Kim organized and which is now widely regarded as a defining moment in the global recognition of Korean modern art. By bringing the Dansaekhwa movement to international attention, the exhibition sparked its meteoric rise in the art market and helped dispel long-held misconceptions. “Many scholars misunderstood pan se qua, which literally translates as ‘monochromic paintings,’ as a Korean interpretation of American Minimalism—the exhibition showed that it was quite the contrary.”

The show clarified that Dansaekhwa was born from a distinct historical context in South Korea, which at the time was still under dictatorship and recovering from the Korean War (1950-53). The movement emerged as an act of resilience and resistance by artists navigating the urgent need to redefine their cultural identity. While breaking from inherited aesthetic traditions, they also grounded their “new Korean artistic language” in fundamental traditional principles, actively resisting Western influences. “Artists were expressing their frustration with the oppressive government censorship of the ‘70s and ‘80s,” Kim explains. “The country was undergoing rapid industrialization and urban development, but the government was also making major decisions with strict media control. There were demonstrations, which led to the Gwangju Uprising in May of 1980. In this context, artists turned to art to resist both the military government and Western influence.”

As Kim suggests, Dansaekhwa is far closer to action painting than initially understood—these artists were making personal, original marks: pushing, scratching, and cracking the surface, breaking with tradition. Their approach aligns more with postwar European movements like Gruppo Zero, Lucio Fontana’s Spatialism and European Informel, which questioned and subverted the physical and conceptual limits of the canvas as a site for representation.

Kim admits that the exhibition came together as a last-minute decision. In 2014, Kukje Gallery organized a Dansaekhwa show in Seoul, coinciding with the La International Biennale Foundation’s gathering in the city. After seeing the exhibition, Germano Celant and Okwui Enwezor, who would go on to curate “All the World’s Futures” at the 56th Venice Biennale, encouraged Kim to bring the work to Venice. The timing proved ideal for bringing these artists to the global stage.

Today, names included in the show—pioneers of Korea’s earliest abstraction and avant-garde, such as Ha Chong-Hyun, Park Seo-Bo and Mono-ha artist Lee Ufan—have seen significant market appreciation and are now held in major museums. This exhibition undeniably contributed to that recognition.

“I was fortunate that Doryun Chong from the M+ Museum, at the time, was just starting to build the museum’s collection,” Kim says. “Other curators, like Alexandra Munroe, the Samsung Asian art curator at the Guggenheim Museum who curated the Gutai show in 2013, also recognized the importance of this group of artists right away and selected works for their museums.” Kim explains that this early interest led to Dansaekhwa works entering collections at MoMA, the Art Institute of Chicago and the Hirshhorn, among others.

“Lee ShinJa: Threadscapes” at the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Gwacheon, in 2023. Image Courtesy of the artist and Tina Kim Gallery. Photo: Hyunjung Rhee

Kim played a pivotal role in securing many of the institutional acquisitions that have elevated Asian artists and artists from the Asian diaspora. Her gallery’s dedication to curatorial excellence, academic rigor and ambitious experimentation did not go unnoticed by institutional leaders. “U.S. institutions have only recently started looking seriously at Asian and Asian American artists,” Kim says. “I’m fortunate to be in this position to support this mission and help build the bridge.”

Today, the landscape for Korean contemporary art has changed dramatically. Korean artists are increasingly featured in international institutions and recognized at major global events, from biennials to top-tier art fairs. Both government and private funding have played essential roles in propelling this Korean Wave into the art world. “Today, K-pop and K-drama are popular worldwide, and Korean art, of course, is benefiting from this widespread interest in Korean culture,” Kim says. “I have so many friends and clients visiting Korea every year, and Frieze Seoul, along with major biennials in Busan and Gwangju, are regularly attracting curators and museum directors.” Kim points out that many international galleries have also opened in Seoul, helping showcase Korean artists abroad. Government-funded programs continue to support Korean artists and curators both domestically and internationally, fostering visibility and cultural exchange. In parallel, major corporations such as Samsung and Hyundai are investing heavily in this growth. “Korean sponsors, you know, recognize the benefit of sponsoring major institutions.”

Asked about the perceived bubble—and potential correction—within the South Korean art market, Kim is confident that the country’s place on the global stage is secure, even if the pace may be shifting to more sustainable levels. “South Korea has such a strong collecting base and institutional system: the number of private corporate museums is growing, and even public museums are extremely active, with their funds supporting more art,” she explains. “There’s been a huge growth in the Korean collector base, and they remain active, even if at a different pace. Plus, new collectors are continuously entering the market.”

Frieze Seoul has consistently exceeded expectations for Tina Kim Gallery, achieving strong results both in sales and in institutional relationship-building since its inaugural edition. “My market is the U.S.,” Kim explains. “I’ve long focused on building my market here, and I wasn’t trying to sell Korean art back to Korea. I was so lucky—people were very excited to have us there, as they noticed and acknowledged what we were doing in New York.” More significantly, she adds, participating in the fair—and planning trips to nearby countries before and after—has been critical for cultivating her collector base and institutional network across the region.

An installation view of Mire Lee’s Hyundai Commission, “Open Wound.” Sebastiano Pellion di Persano

While Kim’s vision for the gallery has long centered on building a platform for Asian artists and the Asian diaspora, her sights are now set on broadening the scope of the program. “I try to identify artists who are relevant in art history, contributing, you know—I help contribute to their research scholarship and help them to enter museums’ collections,” she says.

Kim points to several notable instances where her gallery’s support has been pivotal in advancing careers and bringing overdue attention to important regional figures. For instance, after taking on young Korean artist Mire Lee following her participation in the 2022 Venice Biennale, Kim introduced her to New York audiences with a museum-quality show of ambitious, experimental installations—one that came with high production costs and substantial risk. Lee later revisited elements of this work in her acclaimed New Museum exhibition the following year and, last October, scaled it up even further with her monumental installation at Tate’s Turbine Hall as part of the Hyundai Commission.

In a similar vein, Kim has played a critical role in the long-overdue recognition of Filipino artist Pacita Abad. She began representing Abad’s estate in 2022, just as a major U.S. retrospective opened at the Walker Art Center before traveling to SFMOMA and then MoMA PS1. “I’m proud to say that Pacita Abad is now one of the most widely collected Asian artists,” Kim says, pointing to the significance of Abad’s work in portraying Asian American immigrant stories—not as narratives of victimhood, but as affirmations of resilience and strength. “That’s what I like about her work. She really celebrates Asian culture while embracing a cosmopolitan perspective.”

Throughout our conversation, Kim often returned to the dynamism of South Asia—not just for its expanding collector base (she noted that most of her sales at Frieze Seoul went to South Asian collectors) but also for its emerging museums and vibrant artistic output. “I’m eager to expand my program to include a wider spectrum of Southeast Asian artists,” Kim said, revealing that the gallery will mount a major curated group exhibition of South Asian artists this summer.

An installation view of Pacita Abad’s “Colors of My Dream” at Tina Kim Gallery in 2023. Photo: Charles Roussel

Confirming the academic rigor that defines its curatorial program, Tina Kim Gallery will unveil a major exhibition this May, “The Making of Modern Korean Art: The Letters of Kim Tschang-Yeul, Kim Whanki, Lee Ufan and Park Seo-Bo, 1961-1982.” Timed to coincide with both the 10-year anniversary of the gallery’s Chelsea space and the landmark Dansaekhwa exhibition, the show brings to light the personal and intellectual exchanges between four pivotal artists as they helped shape the trajectory of modern Korean art in the decades following the Korean War.

Featuring major paintings by Kim Tschang-Yeul, Kim Whanki, Lee Ufan and Park Seo-Bo—alongside their original correspondence, archival documents, photographs and ephemera—the exhibition traces the global dialogues and artistic debates that laid the foundation for Korean modernism’s first international breakthrough.

“Korean art’s prominence today is not just a result of recent support and investment on multiple levels,” Kim says. “It was really grounded in the efforts these artists made in the ’50s, ’60s and ’70s. It didn’t happen overnight.” She explains how the letters exchanged between the artists became critical tools for sharing exhibition plans, navigating diplomatic hurdles and sustaining an emerging network of transnational collaboration. “These letters show the depth of the struggles these artists faced,” Kim continues, recounting, for instance, how Park Seo-Bo and Kim Tschang-Yeul coordinated their participation in the 1961 Venice Biennale by mail. “One letter, for example, has Kim Tschang-Yeul telling Park Seo-Bo, ‘You must go to the Korean embassy and ask them to sign this, and you have to take it to the Biennale office by this date.’ They should really make a movie out of this.”

The exhibition—five years in the making—is accompanied by the release of a landmark publication featuring these never-before-published letters, offering new insight into the inner workings of a generation that helped bring Korean art onto the global stage.

An installation view of “The Making of Modern Korean Art: The Letters of Kim Tschang-Yeul, Kim Whanki, Lee Ufan and Park Seo-Bo, 1961-1982.” Photo by Hyunjung Rhee. Courtesy of Tina Kim Gallery

Despite global headwinds, Kim remains confident in the continued growth of the art market, particularly across Asia. “Asian history and culture are so rich, going back thousands of years, alongside the region’s economic growth,” she says, underscoring the immense potential for further expansion. “Particularly in Southeast Asia, it’s only a matter of time—in the next 20 years, many museums will open in that region.”

Throughout our conversation, Kim reiterates her ongoing commitment to leading her gallery, even as she oversees a resourceful international team. She remains closely involved in all aspects of the gallery’s operations, including traveling to numerous fairs each year—an approach that continues to generate vital opportunities to meet clients and cultivate both new and longstanding relationships. “I think one of the other strengths I have is that I participate in many major international art fairs,” she says. “When you have a global market, you’re not heavily dependent on one region, allowing you to plan better for challenging times.” Kim also stresses the importance of maintaining a program that actively engages multiple regions. “I’m constantly researching to expand my program. You really have to think five years or ten years ahead.”

The Making of Modern Korean Art” is on view at Tina Kim Gallery through June 21, 2025.

Vitrine view: “The Making of Modern Korean Art: The Letters of Kim Tschang-Yeul, Kim Whanki, Lee Ufan and Park Seo-Bo, 1961-1982.” Photo by Hyunjung Rhee. Courtesy of Tina Kim Gallery



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