Skip to content
Busan news
Breeze in Busan

Young Artists of Busan Featured in Busan Museum of Art's 'My Young & Sad Day' Exhibition

Busan Museum of Art will showcase the "My Young & Sad Day" exhibition from March 10 to August 6, 2023, featuring the original works of Busan-based emerging artists. The exhibition will be held in the grand exhibition room on the third floor of the main building and will introduce over 70 new works across various mediums, including painting, media, installation, and video. The exhibition is a representative program of the Busan Museum of Art, which has been discovering and introducing talented l

By Maru Kim
Mar 9, 2023
Updated: Feb 7, 2025
2 min read
Share Story
Young Artists of Busan Featured in Busan Museum of Art's 'My Young & Sad Day' Exhibition

Busan Museum of Art will showcase the "My Young & Sad Day" exhibition from March 10 to August 6, 2023, featuring the original works of Busan-based emerging artists. The exhibition will be held in the grand exhibition room on the third floor of the main building and will introduce over 70 new works across various mediums, including painting, media, installation, and video.

The exhibition is a representative program of the Busan Museum of Art, which has been discovering and introducing talented local artists since its launch in March 1999. Over the past 20 years, the program has produced approximately 70 artists through 16 exhibitions.

The exhibition highlights the challenges faced by the younger generation today, such as anxiety, depression, and the daunting task of navigating a world ridden with debt, population cliff, and local extinction. The works of the three artists, Doki Kim, Minwook Oh, and Junghwan Cho, reflect these challenges and the significant impact of the pandemic on the shrinking of the culture and art world.

The exhibition title "My Young & Sad Day" was derived from the popular college district graffiti poetry collection "Sad Our Young Day" in the 1980s. The exhibition aims to change the focus from "us" back to "my" and address the current reality where individuals cannot even share their sadness.

The three participating artists, each offering their unique perspectives, seek new ways to recognize and reflect on the collapsing world. Doki Kim explores a precarious life through non-human beings, Minwook Oh re-establishes the relationship between the self and the world through subjective montage history, and Junghwan Cho accelerates the old futurist imagination. The exhibition is divided into three sections, namely acceleration, energy flow, and impression, and the artists participate in the subject separately and together.

The exhibition will also feature various programs, including the screening of Minwook Oh's feature film on weekends in the auditorium on the first basement floor of the art museum from April, artist talks from the end of May, and a symposium in June on the subject of young artists and local art practice. Through the young and new perspectives of the three artists, the exhibition hopes to showcase the new face of the Busan art world and highlight the concerns of the youth generation today.

Related Topics

Share This Story

Knowledge is most valuable when shared with the community.

Editorial Context

"Independent journalism relies on radical transparency. View our full log of editorial notes, corrections, and project dispatches in the Newsroom Transparency Log."

Reader Pulse

The report's impact signal

0 SIGNALS

Be the first to provide a reading pulse. These collective signals help our newsroom understand the impact of our reporting.

Join the deep discussion
Loading this week's participation brief

Join the discussion

Article Discussion

A more thoughtful conversation, anchored to the story

Atlantic-style discussion for this article. One-level replies, editor prompts, and moderation-first participation are now powered directly by Prisma.

Discussion Status

Open

Please sign in to join the discussion.

Loading discussion...

The Weekly Breeze

Independent reporting and analysis on Busan,
Korea, and the broader regional economy.

Independent journalism, directly to your inbox.

Related Coverage

Continue with related reporting

Follow adjacent reporting from the same newsroom file, with linked coverage that extends the current story's desk and context.

What Busan’s tourism rebound does not fix
NewsApr 23, 2026

What Busan’s tourism rebound does not fix

Visitors are back, but the sectors that give the city economic depth remain under pressure — leaving Busan busier on the surface and more exposed underneath.

Continue this story

More on this issue

Stay with the same issue through adjacent reporting that carries the argument, context, or consequences forward.

Can Smart Monitoring Change an Aging Industrial Complex in Busan?
NewsApr 16, 2026

Can Smart Monitoring Change an Aging Industrial Complex in Busan?

At Seobusan Smart Valley, Busan is trying to use an integrated control system to manage the risks of an older industrial complex. Whether that becomes a working public-safety tool or a technology showcase will depend on results the city has yet to prove.

Busan’s Two Futures
NewsApr 13, 2026

Busan’s Two Futures

Busan is aging, losing younger residents, and struggling to sustain confidence in North Port, its flagship waterfront project. With World Design Capital 2028, the city is trying to show that visible ambition can still produce real urban renewal.

More from the author

Continue with Breeze in Busan

Stay with the same line of reporting through more work from this byline.