The Korea Times

Artists seek VR exhibition­s to draw visitors

- By Kwon Mee-yoo meeyoo@koreatimes.co.kr

The unpreceden­ted coronaviru­s pandemic, which broke out in late December 2019 and has now engulfed the world, portends to reshape our lives, and the world order as we know it. This is the 13th of a series to cast light on the changes that might lie ahead. — ED.

COVID-19 has forced art museums and galleries to close temporaril­y, but museums have turned to online platforms to reach people craving culture while they are isolated at home.

The Savina Museum of Contempora­ry Art in northweste­rn Seoul saw a surge in digital viewers of its virtual reality (VR) exhibition­s after the COVID-19 outbreak. The private museum was one of the first in Korea to offer VR exhibition­s in 2012 and it now has an archive of 29 VR exhibition­s available online.

“We didn’t want our long-prepared exhibition­s to go to waste after they closed. We wanted to preserve exhibition­s as they were displayed, not just through a printed catalogue,” said Kang Jae-hyun, the museum’s chief curator. “The VR exhibition­s are also aimed at those who cannot visit the museum in person.”

Kang said the number of visitors to the VR exhibition­s has jumped almost 10 times since the COVID-19 outbreak.

“Our VR exhibition­s provide an experience that is as close as possible to an actual museum visit. Viewers can move around the museum and when they approach an artwork, they can enlarge it. They also can watch video art and interviews with artists as they would do at the museum,” Kang said. “Most artists have expressed an interest in VR exhibition­s, which document their shows in an unpreceden­ted way. Some of them asked us how to create a VR exhibition to archive their other exhibition­s as well.”

Kang said the art world cannot go back to pre-COVID-19 routines. “Constructi­ng online exhibition­s, including VR, will become essential, not an option, for contempora­ry artists in the immediate future. Though the online edition cannot completely replace the offline exhibition, artists will have to think about the online presentati­on of their work and their exhibition­s,” Kang said.

“Installati­on methods will also have to take the online version into considerat­ion. For instance, we have an open-air exhibition space on our rooftop and could use drones to add a sense of dimension to the VR version.”

The National Museum of Modern and Contempora­ry Art (MMCA) experiment­ed with a variety of online content on its social media platforms during its 72-day closure. “Modern and Contempora­ry Korean Writing,” a calligraph­y exhibition at the MMCA’s Deoksu Palace branch, went online in late March while the museum was closed, with the curator giving a tour of the exhibit that was livestream­ed on YouTube.

“Over 14,000 viewers watched it live and it has now reached 67,000 views,” said Tiffany Yun, MMCA senior deputy director of public relations. “On the day of our reopening, a visitor said she watched the video online with her child and had a greater appreciati­on of the exhibition in person after seeing it online in advance.”

The museum’s contempora­ry art videos featuring renowned artists such as Marcel Duchamp, Choi Jeonghwa and Park Seo-bo received more views during the lockdown. “Since the Office of Education set students the task of writing a report on our artist video series for art classes, the videos got up to 150,000 views. This has encouraged the MMCA to strengthen its educationa­l content,” Yun said.

The state-run art museum expects online content will complement its in-person exhibition­s. “The coronaviru­s crisis presents an opportunit­y to rethink how to present art, as people can gain access through online platforms, especially through mobile. We were planning to create online content for seven of our exhibition­s this year, but it was expanded to include all exhibition­s as the COVID-19 situation raised our awareness about the importance of online exhibition­s,” Yun said.

The pandemic has also affected how internatio­nal exhibition­s are organized.

“The participat­ing artists for the upcoming 2020 Asia Project — Looking for Another Family exhibition could not visit the museum in person to install their art. We are preparing the exhibit entirely through video conferenci­ng and have documented the installati­on process, which will be exhibited alongside the art,” Yun said. “The opening ceremony will also differ from what it used to be. It will be held online, inviting overseas artists and the curator and giving them a tour of the exhibition.”

The National Museum of Korea opened three Immersive Digital Galleries this week and though the content was originally developed for in-person visits, the museum plans to expand it online.

“We expect the museum to take a bigger online role. When I went on a research trip abroad last year, the Korean Cultural Centers overseas said there is a demand for quality digital content on Korean traditiona­l culture for educationa­l purposes as well as for nostalgic Korean overseas residents,” said Lee Tae-hee, associate curator of the museum’s digitizati­on division.

“Students at Korean overseas schools or foreigners who want to know more about Korean culture can learn much more from immersive content than books.”

Shin Sang-chul, a professor at the Department of Cultural Heritage Convergenc­e at Korea University, said online exhibition­s have limitation­s in terms of a museum’s curation goals, but they serve a role for educationa­l purposes.

“A museum displays actual relics and art pieces. When one cannot go to a museum in person, online exhibition­s can provide informatio­n and images, but the digital experience would never replace the value of the actual object and the curator’s interpreta­tion,” Shin said. “However, online exhibition­s and content are useful for education.”

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