Clandestine Pursuit in the Long Afternoon (Signed)
The reality of a politically turbulent Korea, captured by a native outsider.
In 1988, when Seoul was gearing up to host the Olympic Games, Korean photographer Koo Bohnchang had just returned from a long sojourn in Germany. An outsider in his own country, Bohnchangs senses were acutely tuned to the messier parts of Koreas shift; he found himself unsettled by Seouls treacherous way of marketing itself.
In his brilliant series Clandestine Pursuit in the Long Afternoon, Bohnchang positions fragmentsfurniture abandoned on the side of a road, statues, silhouettes of strangers, a close-up of a holstered guninto a rhythmic whole that suggests a perilous, explosive atmosphere lingering just below the surface. Each single shot possesses the power to work on its owndue to a photographic sense that seems ahead of its timebut woven together, the series unfolds its true, almost existentialist strength.
30 years after its creation, the series is finally published in a photobook by Tokyo-based Zen Foto Gallery.
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