Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Korean audience

Brit singer Pixie Lott enchants Korean audience




Pixie Lott, a 21-year-old singer-songwriter from Britain, captivated the Korean audience with her signature husky voice and adorable smile at her album showcase in Seoul on Wednesday evening.

The singer, who gained popularity around the world with her hit-song “Mama Do (Uh oh, Uh oh),” was in Seoul for four days this week to promote her special album “Young Foolish Happy” released only in some Asian countries including Korea, Japan and Taiwan. She left Korea on Thursday for Malaysia, her next destination for the album promotion.

The singer first showed off her musical skill along with a somewhat modest stage performance, quite different from what young Korean music fans have seen on YouTube.

On Wednesday, the singer sang seven songs in an hour-long mini concert and tried to get closer to the audience by telling them about her shopping experience on Garosugil in Sinsa-dong.

“We had a little bit of time, so we went shopping on Garosugil. And I bought some clothes and could have been spending hours there but we didn’t have enough time. And we also tried some Korean food which was very tasty,” she told the audience at Club Junkie, where her showcase was held.

Lott, known as a leading fashionista in the U.K., also shared her first hanbok moment, saying it was something she would never forget. Park Sool-nyeo, a leading hanbok designer in Seoul, presented the Korean traditional dress especially designed for the singer in pink. The singer surprised the audience by wearing the hanbok at the end of the show.



Lott is one of many pop stars promoting their albums and concerts in Asia, the world’s fast emerging music market. To win the attention of the Asian audience, she also recorded a track titled “Dancing on My Own” featuring Korean artists GD and T.O.P from boy band Big Bang.

Pixie Lott, whose real name is Victoria Louise Lott, debuted in 2009 with single “Mama Do” which went to No. 1 in the U.K. Singles Chart. She released her second album, “Young Foolish Album” in 2011 with songs entering the U.K.’s top charts.

Korean contemporary artists

Korean contemporary artists present innovative forms of art at Kassel Documenta

Three Korean artists are showcasing their works at one of the world’s largest and most prestigious contemporary art fairs held in Germany.





It is the second time Korean artists have been invited to the Kassel Documenta since 1992 ― the festival has been taking place every five years since 1955.

The three 40-something-year-old artists Moon Kyung-won, Jeon Joon-ho and Yang Haegue present innovative art forms that focus on social meanings.

The art fair is considered the most innovative contemporary art platform, and invites over 150 renowned artists from 55 countries to Kassel, a city destroyed during World War II and revived as the major transportation and industrial hub of Germany. During the fair period which lasts 100 days from June 9 to Sept. 16, the whole city turns into a giant museum in which artworks are displayed in parks, museums and train stations.

The team of Moon Kyung-won and Jeon Joon-ho, both 43, present artworks that shed light on social function and role of art through their “News from Nowhere” project consisting of three parts ― a film, installation and a publication.

Moon and Jeon’s collaborative project starts with a film that shows the survival of two artists in a post-apocalyptic environment.

Starring famous Korean actor and actress Lee Jung-jae and Lim Soo-jung, the 13-minute film “El Fin del Mundo” (The End of the World) depicts the last art form at the end of the world and the revival of art based on dialogue between two characters.

“‘News from Nowhere’ works on the assumption that a major climate change endangers humanity’s survival. Through the two main characters, a man and a woman, the film asks questions about human beings who have to adapt to a new environment,” artists wrote on the website describing their artworks.

The artists throw questions about life after the end of the world such as “Will today’s social system still be relevant in this future?”, “What values will sustain our existence?” and “Will art be still around?”

“The questions about the future will, hopefully, lead to discourse and a series of thoughts surrounding life,” they said.

Next to the screening room sits an installation titled “Voice of Metanoia,” the second part of the project. The collaborative piece made by 10 artists, designers and architects including Japanese designer Takram and Korean fashion designer Jung Kuho recreates a new lifestyle and products based on the fictional social system built in the film.

The last part of the project is the book, a collection of interviews and records gathered during the project making.

Yang Haegue, a Korean-born artist who is based in Seoul and Berlin, presented two projects ― an installation project that is placed at an abandoned train station and a stage performance with the distinguished French actress Jeanne Balibar.

Yang installed a hanging, moving-blind installation, inspired by the industrialization that sprouted in the now abandoned old freight terminal in Kassel.

Through the installation consisting of 45-meter-long and 2-meter-wide black aluminum blinds, Yang tried to contemplate “the collective memory” of industrialization, which was also experienced by Koreans during the 1970s and 1980s.

Through the train-like shape of the installation and movements of the blinds, Yang recreates the memory of industrialization in the deserted train station in the city which used to be an industrial and transportation hub.

Yang also presented a stage performance during the art fair’s preview week on June 7 at a theater in Kassel.