The Artist © Shin Kiwoun

Grand Prize Winner: Shin Kiwoun

“There is a saying, ‘From dust to dust,’ that exists across both Eastern and Western cultures. We all know that everything eventually disappears. However, it is not easy to actually witness that fact and process. My work is about making it visible.”

Shin Kiwoun (31), who received both his BFA and MA in Sculpture from Seoul National University, won the Grand Prize for his video and installation works addressing the futility of money and the transience of values created by human beings.

His submission consisted of two works: the six-minute video Disillusion-Coin and the installation Disillusion. The video depicts foreign coins being ground into powder by a machine and then seemingly returning to their original forms through reversed playback. In the installation Disillusion, when viewers stand before a CCTV camera, the machine appears to grind the camera itself while simultaneously pulverizing the viewers’ images.

“The imagery engraved on coins usually represents figures or animals and plants considered valuable or admirable by a nation. But in the end, those things are also merely ‘illusions.’ That is the central message of my work. That is why I titled it ‘Disillusion,’ which refers to the breaking of illusions or a sense of disenchantment.”

Previously, Shin had also created works in which Sony PlayStation consoles, Apple iPods, mobile phones, and watches were ground into powder. His works were also included in 《Thermocline of Art – New Asian Waves》, held at ZKM in Karlsruhe, Germany, in celebration of the institution’s 10th anniversary (through October 14).


Shin Kiwoun, Installation view of Disillusion-coin © Kim Hyung-soo

“At the exhibition, which opened on the 14th under the direction of independent curator Wonil Rhee, I presented a work in which clocks are ground away and erased. I heard that Peter Weibel, the director of ZKM, encountered this work two months ago and was moved to tears. I assume it reminded him of the difficult period during World War II, as he himself is Jewish.”

This autumn, he will leave for London to pursue an MFA at Goldsmiths, University of London.

“It is a school that teaches artists, in an almost combative way, how to widely communicate and persuade the art world of their originality and logic. In class, you have to explain everything in detail—why you made a particular work, why you used a certain color. It is a role that has become extremely important for artists in contemporary art.”

He is the son of Shin Yang Seob (65), a Western-style painter who received the Presidential Prize at the Korea National Art Exhibition in 1981.

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