Han Youngsoo
Han Youngsoo
Gaeseong, Seoul, b. unknown
Gaeseong, Seoul, b. unknown
Born in 1933 to an affluent family in Gaeseong, Han Youngsoo showed artistic talent from a young age and pursued photography as a hobby. After his military service in the Korean War, he became a member of the Shinsunwhue (New Line) group, an association of realist photographers who championed “everyday life photography.” In Seoul, they documented the resurrection of the city in the late 1950s and the social realities of the Korean people. South Korea’s economy saw explosive growth in the 1960s. In 1966, Han founded his photography studio, Han’s Photo, which pioneered the country’s advertising and fashion photography industries. Han went on to take leadership positions in numerous photography associations and cultural institutes. In 1987, he published Life, a photography book that compiled historic scenes of Seoul in the aftermath of the Korean War. After his passing in 1999, his daughter Han Sunjung established the Han Youngsoo Foundation to promote Han’s legacy and preserve the estate of his negatives and other archives. The Foundation has garnered international recognition for Han’s photographs. His works were included in the Les Rencontres d’Arles (2014), and he has held recent solo exhibitions at the International Center of Photography in New York (2017), Baik Art Gallery LA (2018), and Harvard University Asia Center (2019). Han’s work has been included in groundbreaking international exhibitions such as The Space Between: The Modern in Korean Art at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) in September 2022.
9 Nov 2022 - 18 Jan 2023
When the spring wind blows
Korea as seen through the eyes of photographer Han Youngsoo is a place of resilience. For Han, the mandate of photography was democratic – to depict the quotidian difficulties and joys of everyday life. Han was a veteran of the Korean War, and his photographs of women depict their leading role in the building of post-war South Korea. Men were scarce after the war, so women took charge of both business and household affairs. Han saw the future of the nation in these women who went on living and raising families in the aftermath of total devastation and loss.
Baik Art Seoul