Gwangju Biennale explores wide spectrum of art touching the communal mind
Posted : 2021-04-08 11:30
Updated : 2021-04-08 12:21 The 13th Gwangju Biennale exhibition shows Outi Pieski s Beavvit II/ Rising Together II, left, and Min Joung-ki s landscape painting, Byeokgye Nine Banded Stream, Buk-gu, Gwangju, April 1. Yonhap
By Lee Gyu-lee
The coronavirus pandemic has changed so much of people s lives and the ways things are done. The Gwangju Biennale is no exception.
The Biennale, one of the largest art events in Asia, has had its fair share of challenges in bringing the much-anticipated show to art lovers.
The exhibition got pushed back twice ― from last September to this February, and then to this April ― and the organizers had to arrange and install most of the artworks without having the international artists present in Korea.
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