Press release

Lee Bul’s Four New Sculptures for The Met’s Fifth Avenue Now on View

A statue in the form of a person with geometric forms wrapping around the figure

Exhibition Dates: Exhibition Dates: September 12, 2024–May 27, 2025
Exhibition Location: The Met Fifth Avenue Facade

한글

The site-specific sculptures are the fifth in the Museum’s annual Genesis Facade Commission series and Lee’s first major project in the United States in over 20 years

The installation is the first under a new multiyear partnership with Genesis to support the annual contemporary art commission
 
(New York, September 12, 2024)— The acclaimed South Korean artist Lee Bul (born 1964, Yeongju; based in Seoul) has transformed the iconic niches of the Museum’s Fifth Avenue facade with a suite of four new works that challenges what sculptures can reveal about our times. Responding to the facade as a site for statues, Lee’s towering sculptures are at once classical and contemporary, forthcoming and elusive. This arresting ambiguity, expressed through amalgamated bodily, mechanical, and architectural archetypes and personal and collective memories, explores how history can be admired as well as destabilized. On view through May 27, 2025, The Genesis Facade Commission: Lee Bul, Long Tail Halo marks Lee’s first major project in the United States in over 20 years.
The exhibition is presented by Genesis.

Additional support is provided by the Korea Foundation, Janice Lee and Joseph Bae, Cynthia Hazen Polsky and Leon B. Polsky, the Director’s Fund, the Kahng Foundation, Miyoung Lee and Neil Simpkins, Helen Lee-Warren and David Warren, and Jerry Speyer and Katherine Farley.

“Lee Bul’s extraordinary sculptures explore the complexities of the human condition through powerful, hybrid forms that draw from the past while speaking to present day hopes and anxieties about the future,” said Max Hollein, The Met’s Marina Kellen French Director and Chief Executive Officer. “This commission series invites artists to engage with, transform, and even challenge The Met’s iconic Fifth Avenue facade, and we’re tremendously excited to see Lee’s works now unveiled.”

Lee Bul said, “My hope is that a personal connection and resonance will be created between the public, the artwork, and the architecture.”
  
“Lee Bul brings her signature visual language to the facade niches and provokes us with her elegant yet haunting figures,” said Lesley Ma, Ming Chu Hsu and Daniel Xu Curator in the Department of Modern and Contemporary Art at The Met and curator of the project. “Long Tail Halo animates the facade and triggers layers of associations that will keep us thinking about the role of sculpture in contemporary culture.”

Lee’s commission comprises four sculptures made of EVA or polycarbonate parts over steel armatures. Long Tail Halo: CTCS #1 and Long Tail Halo: CTCS #2 flank the Museum entrance and their human-like forms recall Cubist and Futurist masterpieces, scholar’s rocks, Greco-Roman classics, and historical armors in The Met collection. Similarly abstract, Long Tail Halo: Secret Sharer II and Long Tail Halo: Secret Sharer III each hunch over a cascade of fragmented prisms; their behavior evokes the artist’s pets who acted as her guardians. The works, independently and in dialogue, symbolize the abiding human desire for progress and perfection while hinting at the failures and repercussions inherent to these pursuits. Together they reflect the endless revisions and transformations in the long narratives of history.  

This installation is the first under a new multiyear partnership with Genesis to present an annual contemporary art commission, which was newly named The Genesis Facade Commission. Each year, The Met invites artists to create new works of art, establishing a dialogue between the artist’s practice, The Met collection, the physical Museum, and The Met’s audiences. It will be the fifth in a series of contemporary commissions for The Met’s facade that previously featured work by Wangechi Mutu (2019), Carol Bove (2021), Hew Locke (2022), and Nairy Baghramian (2023). 

The Genesis Facade Commission: Lee Bul, Long Tail Halo is conceived by the artist in consultation with Lesley Ma, Ming Chu Hsu and Daniel Xu Curator in the Department of Modern and Contemporary Art at The Met. 

About the Artist

Lee Bul is a leading artist of her generation who works across a diverse range of media—from drawing, sculpture, and painting to performance, installation, and video—to examine themes of beauty, desire, corruption, and decay. The Genesis Facade Commission is Lee’s first major project in the United States since her solo exhibition at the New Museum in New York in 2002. Lee represented South Korea at the 48th Venice Biennale in 1999 and received her country’s prestigious Ho-Am Prize in 2019. Major retrospectives of her work were held at the Hayward Gallery, London (2018) and the Seoul Museum of Art (2021). Another will open at the Leeum Museum, Seoul in 2025 and travel to M+, Hong Kong. 

Since her breakthrough performances in the late 1980s in Seoul and Tokyo wearing sewn sculptural forms, Lee has been heralded as a pioneer in contemporary sculpture and installation. She is most known for her sculptural figures and landscapes that use industrial materials and labor-intensive process and blur the boundaries between the organic and the artificial. Sensuous yet fragmented, these dramatic constructions critique progress-driven, perfection-obsessed values through transformations of familiar forms. Lee’s structurally and visually complex work also explores the aspirations and failures of utopian visions and exposes a sense of vulnerability and melancholy in history. 

Credits and Related Content


The Genesis Facade Commission: Lee Bul, Long Tail Halo is conceived by the artist in consultation with Lesley Ma, the Ming Chu Hsu and Daniel Xu Curator in the Department of Modern and Contemporary Art at The Met.

The Museum has organized a variety of related art and educational programs, including “An Evening with Artist Lee Bul,” during which Lee will discuss her work in conversation with Lesley Ma, and “Open Studio – Futuristic Figures,” an immersive experience about Lee’s artistic process.

Future programming details will be posted on The Met website as they become available.

The Genesis Facade Commission: Lee Bul, Long Tail Halo is featured on The Met’s website as well as on social media via the hashtag #GenesisFacadeCommission and #MetLeeBul.

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September 12, 2024
 
Contact: Matthew Tom, Ann Bailis
Communications@metmuseum.org

Installation view Long Tail Halo: CTCS #2, 2024
Image credit: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Photo by Eugenia Burnett Tinsley

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