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K- pop Fashion On Full Display At ʻ Hallyu! The Korean Wave’

● BTS, Blackpink and other K-pop stars are helping to spread "hallyu" worldwide as seen in the exhibition at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.

- BY ROSEMARY FEITELBERG

BTS and Blackpink need no introducti­on to millions of K-pop fans, but a fuller and fashion-infused examinatio­n of the highflying Korean cultural wave is now on at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.

On view through July 28, “Hallyu! The Korean Wave” is the first U.S. installmen­t of an exhibition that debuted at London's Victoria & Albert Museum a few years ago. Pronounced, “Hally-u,” the word means “Korean Wave,” a term that was first used in 1992 when South Korea entered into diplomatic relations with China. The “Korean Wave” is a cultural phenomenon that was initially driven by Korean dramas and accelerate­d with the worldwide popularity of K-pop.

Fashion plays a prominent role in the 250-piece exhibition, as do music, TV, cinema and the beauty industry.

“In a way the American audience needs to be exposed to the fashion vibe, but fashion as an art form. But at the same time, if you look at other mediums like dramas, TV and K-pop, fashion is so much of a part of it. That is undeniable, especially with the K-pop groups with all of their performanc­es and music videos. The dresses and what they wear are so important, raising their identities and of the items themselves,” said Christina Yu Yu, the MFA's Matsutaro Shoriki chair, art of Asia. “Fashion is a mass recognizab­le form of art in itself.”

While BTS wears luxury labels like Dior and Blackpink's Jennie fronts Chanel while Lisa is an ambassador for Celine, the new exhibition highlights some lesser-known labels. K-pop fans will recognize a staple at concerts — light sticks that are designed to reflect the identity of different groups — and original outfits worn by Aespa and Ateez for their music videos “Next Level” and “Fireworks.” There are also dresses that have been worn by generation­s of K-pop idols, including ones by designer Park Sohee and “Next in Fashion” winner Minju Kim, and a large-scale needlework designed by South Korean artist Kyungah Ham and made by anonymous embroiders from North Korea.

Other pieces explore the Korean American experience by Bostonbase­d artist Timothy Hyunsoo Lee and Washington, D.C.-based artist Julia Kwon. A more personal view is detailed in a video featuring the Philadelph­ia-based Korean American mother-daughter team of Jeoung and Jessica Kim.

“It's really a show about cultural superpower, but it's also about how we're all connected these days. Some people think that it's only about youth culture but it's more than that, especially if you think about cinema, ‘Parasite' and ‘Oldboy,' and all of the Korean TV drama series on Netflix [including ‘Squid Game],” she said.

PSY's breakout music video “Gangnam Style” has also been a boom to the movement. Such attraction­s don't just expose people to Korean and Asian culture, but they often have universal messages, too, Yu Yu said.

Yu Yu said, “When you think about ‘hallyu,' the image that comes to most people's minds is something very edgy, contempora­ry and youth-culture driven. The show has a modern vibe and a faster pace feeling. But in the fashion section, a number of people have commented about how the pieces are made. It is a calmer part of the exhibition, partially because it was designed that way.“

Another reason is that the area highlights the transforma­tion of the hanbok form and how it was a traditiona­l Korean national dress, while today fashion designers transform this traditiona­l form into something that is more radical. Fashion is one of the areas in “Hallyu!” that magnifies the coexistenc­e of the old and new, with the fashion on display being the manifestat­ion of that. Yu Yu said, “It's really talking about something that can easily complete another thing, and how you can make the old-fashioned relatable, or even fashionabl­e and exciting.”

Nearly 5,000 people turned up for one of the kickoff events for “Hallyu!,” which featured K-pop performanc­es presented by CJ ENM, Yu Yu said. A Korean film festival and a conversati­on with awardwinni­ng author Min Jin Lee are a few of the upcoming programs before the exhibition moves to the Asian Art Museum in San Francisco.

To tie into the booming effect of hallyu and how everything is taking place simultaneo­usly, the MFA worked that into the exhibition's design layout, which is set up so that the visitor chooses which section of the exhibition they would like to explore first — as opposed to a linear experience. Another point of differenti­ation from the V&A show — the Boston one draws from the museum's important collection of Korean art, including a traditiona­l hanbok dress.

Although the MFA has an ongoing alliance with Uniqlo (having offered UT Graphic T-shirts inspired by Katsushika Hokusai's iconic “ukiyo-e” woodblock prints, among other artists' work), it tapped a Boston-based streetwear company, Endstate, to create hoodies, T-shirts and other apparel that was inspired by six Korean objects in the MFA's collection. Endstate's designs include NFCchipped products — a pair of sneakers, two T-shirts and two sweatshirt­s. The near-field communicat­ions technology gives consumers perks like VIP and early entrance to select “Hallyu!”-themed MFA Late Nites.

MFA museum store shoppers will also find hallyu-inspired designs from a few other Korean American brands, as well as whimsical items like a $48 Matcha

Boba Milk Tea-shaped handbag. Choosing community-based resources that present shoppers with a sense of discovery was intentiona­l, according to Yu Yu. “Also, the names of a lot of the designers, who are featured in the show, are probably not widely known, and are unknown to the American audience. This is a great introducti­on for the American audience.”

 ?? ?? Members of the K-pop band Aespa in their "Next Level" music video.
Members of the K-pop band Aespa in their "Next Level" music video.
 ?? ?? A glimpse of “Hallyu! The Korean Wave” exhibition at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.
A glimpse of “Hallyu! The Korean Wave” exhibition at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston.
 ?? ?? Minju Kim's Moon Jar dress in cotton and wool.
Minju Kim's Moon Jar dress in cotton and wool.
 ?? ?? “Seowoo and Her Pink Things” by Jeong Mee Yoon.
“Seowoo and Her Pink Things” by Jeong Mee Yoon.
 ?? ?? Miss Sohee's “The Peony Dress” in French lamé from the designer's 2020 graduation collection “The Girl in Full Bloom.”
Miss Sohee's “The Peony Dress” in French lamé from the designer's 2020 graduation collection “The Girl in Full Bloom.”

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