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2024
Works
Opus no. 8
Studio
2024
Works
Opus no. 9
Studio
2024
Works
Opus Series
Studio
2023
Exhibitions
LL Interspace: HOTPOT
Galerie KUB
2023
Works
Composition no. 3
Studio
2023
Works
Composition no. 2
Studio
2023
Works
Composition no. 1
Studio
2023
Works
The New Altar no. 4
Studio
2023
Works
The New Altar no. 3
Studio
2023
Exhibitions
Ketterer Kunst Masterclass Preis 2023
Ketterer Kunst
2023
Works
The Absurd Dance no. 3
Studio
2023
Works
The Absurd Dance no. 2
Studio
2023
Works
The Absurd Dance no. 1
Studio
2023
Exhibitions
Table of Contents
Bistro 21
2023
Works
Instant Crush
Studio
2023
Works
Drawing Set for Study no. 1
Studio
2023
News
Open Studio: L’air Arts Paris
Cité Falguière
2023
Works
Life no. 1 & no. 2
Studio
2023
News
Residency: L’air Arts Paris
Cité Falguière
2023
Works
Sigil no. 1
Studio
2024
Texts
Dancing in the Pandemic Blues: The significance of Musical Optimism in Times of Crisis.
Publication
2022
Works
Tacet and the Portrait of a Headless
Studio
2022
Exhibitions
Just Rolllllll
documenta fifteen
2022
Works
The Circle of Love
documenta 15
2021
Exhibitions
Between Strangers
Nuweland Gallery
2021
Exhibitions
Investec Cape Town Art Fair 2021
CTICC
2021
Exhibitions
11:11
Eclectica Contemporary
2020
Exhibitions
Peepshow
Online
2022
Exhibitions
Neighbours / Des Voisin.e.s
Cité Falguière
2020
Works
Bearing Between the Wheel and the Cycle
Studio
2020
Exhibitions
Art Rotterdam
Rotterdam
2019
Press
Two artists use video and sculpture to explore perceptions of history and memory
Design Indaba
2019
Exhibitions
Satellites
Suburbia Contemporary
2019
Press
Kyu Sang Lee
SA Art Times
2019
Exhibitions
Investec Cape Town Art Fair 2019: SOLO Section
CTICC
2019
Press
Spotlight on Investec Cape Town Art Fair 2019
Artthrob
2019
Press
Restful Moments: Cape Town Art Fair’s SOLO exhibition
The Art Momentum
2019
Press
Artist to Shine at the Art Aair
News24
2019
Press
Investec Cape Town Art Fair 2019 champions emerging artists and digital practices
Bubblegum Club
2019
Press
10 Reasons To Come To Investec Cape Town Art Fair In 2019
Africa.com
2019
Works
The Sound of Light: Sequences I-III
Studio
2019
Exhibitions
Still Here Tomorrow to High Five You Yesterday
Zeitz MOCAA
2018
Press
The Structured Surrealism of Kyu Sang Lee
The Art Momentum
2018
Exhibitions
Also Known As Africa
Le Carreau du Temple
2018
Works
A Motif for Thrity Two Irregular Orbits
Studio
2018
Works
Photographs in Twelve Parts
Studio
2018
Exhibitions
Throwing Shapes
SMITH Studio
2018
Exhibitions
nano 1.2
Barnard Gallery
2018
Works
ein kleines Nachtfoto No.2
Studio
2018
Works
ein kleines Nachtfoto No.1
Studio
2018
Exhibitions
Stop Stop Click
Eclectica Contemporary
2018
Exhibitions
Investec Cape Town Art Fair 2018
CTICC
2017
Exhibitions
Salad
SMITH Studio
2017
Exhibitions
SS17
Gallery MOMO
2017
Press
SS17 at Gallery MOMO
Artthrob
2017
News
Kyu Sang Lee wins a Celeste Prize
University of Cape Town
2017
Exhibitions
Celeste Prize 2017, 9th edition by Fatoş Üstek
OXO Tower Wharf
2017
Works
Cry When Flowers Fall in the Morning
Studio
2017
Exhibitions
Turbine Art Fair
Turbine Hall
2017
Works
Matisse and the People of the Night
Studio
2017
Works
Dancing Along Alone
Studio
2017
Exhibitions
Be Kind, Please Rewind
Gallery MOMO
2017
Exhibitions
Marked
Eclectica Print Gallery
2017
Works
Still-life with Three Suspended Bodies
Studio
2017
Exhibitions
Paradise Regained
Eclectica Contemporary
2016
Works
The Festival of Insignificance
Studio
2016
Exhibitions
Meditative Moments
Müllers Gallery
2016
Exhibitions
By Way of Hand
Cape Town School of Photography
2016
Exhibitions
Focus
Jan Royce Gallery
2014
Works
From Now to Then
Studio
Contact
Phone(De) : +49 176 43229331
Email : kyusang.q.lee@gmail.com
Instagram : kyusanglee_
Phone(Kr) : +82 10 3895 0550
Still Here Tomorrow to High Five You Yesterday
Exhibitions
2019
Zeitz MOCAA

Still Here Tomorrow to High Five You Yesterday
30 January – 19 September, 2019
Zeitz Museum of Contemporary Art Africa.

Still Here Tomorrow to High Five You Yesterday, an exhibition at Zeitz MOCAA, explores the different ways in which artists, performers, writers and architects tackle the complexities inherent within the dual concepts of Utopia and progress. Exploring emergent spaces that exist both in the realm of the mind and in the physical unknown, the exhibition points critically to the mirages, metaphors, stereotypes and matrixes of progress.

Through the works of contemporary artists from Africa and its diaspora, the exhibition engages with the phenomenon of travel and migration through imagined, alternative realities that reference both fixed and immaterial locations.

Musician Sun Ra speaks of ‘unknown things, impossible things, ancient things and potential things’. In this way, the exhibition enters alternative stratospheres, allowing viewers to explore the ‘multiple simultaneous utopianisms’ (Pamela Phatsimo Sunstrum) that inhabit our perceptions and worlds.

The artists in this exhibition propose many different concepts of time, a time that is no longer linear but cyclical, inter-dimensional and experiential. The artworks suggest an infinite realm of potential transformation – where past, present and future collapse into one. Evoking a place yet-to-be-known, the exhibition challenges the idea that utopia is synonymous with escapist pursuits. Instead, the works of the artists on exhibition offer a poetic critique of the norms of existing societies.

Born from notions of space travel and the tropes of Afro-futurist movements, the exhibition is conceived in chapters that unfold and progress presenting a plurality of post-colonial futures. In this way, the exhibition shapes and shifts in the gallery, disrupting and distorting the constructs of utopia and its opposite: dystopia, encouraging more nuanced perspectives on our shared futures.

Looking at the works of multiple artists, Chapter 2 provides an opportunity to re-read, re-examine and consider our relationship to time and space.

It seeks to interrogate alternative physical and metaphorical spaces, letting viewers explore imagined worlds, past spaces and potential future outcomes.

Kyu Sang Lee’s photographic artistic practice draws on his experience within distinct regions and cultures of the world and exhibits strong influences of Eastern, Western and African cultures.

Working in predominantly black and white photography, Sang Lee presents an interesting juxtaposition to ideas of the “lost” and are driven by the concept of time and fate. Interlocking these notions with photography, he focuses on constructing the realm of the metaphysical, the spiritual and the surreal.

Photography in South Africa indeed has been a violent one. People use images to influence and invade other minds. Posters and news, as images are works in a similar way. Just like heavy rain, one lives in a world with an overflow of information where one cannot always identify what is true. The more information flows, the more one forgets about oneself and eventually, one’s life becomes dominated by oblivion.

As an art student, Sang Lee was awarded the Simon Gerson Prize (2016) for his graduating body of work and was previously awarded the Cecil Skotnes Award for Most Promising Artist at Michaelis School of Fine Art, The University of Cape Town (2014). After graduating from the Michaelis School of Fine Art in 2016, Sang Lee won the Celeste Prize for Photography & Digital Graphics (2017). He has exhibited with Eclectica on numerous occasions and has exhibited both locally and internationally.

The series titled, The Sound Of Light-Sequence I-III by Kyu Sang Lee (made in collaboration with Martin Wilson) is featured in Zeitz MOCAA’s Afrofuturist exhibition, Still here tomorrow to high five you yesterday… (2019). - Zeitz MOCAA

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