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[[File:Lee Ufan at Guggenheim.jpg|thumb|Ufan setting up his art at the Guggenheim.]]
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'''Lee Ufan''' (born 1936 in [[Haman County]], in the south of the [[Korean Peninsula]]) is a [[Korean people|Korean]]<ref>돌·쇠’로 우주 삼라만상 얘기할 수 있더라 (Aug 27, 2009), [http://www.hani.co.kr/arti/culture/music/373509.html] ''Hankyoreh''.</ref> minimalist painter and sculptor<ref>[http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1248/is_7_91/ai_104836759 Felicity Fenner, ''Art in America'', July, 2003],</ref> [[artist]] and [[academic]], honored by the government of Japan for having "contributed to the development of
contemporary art in Japan."<ref name="mofa2009">[[Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Japan)|Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs]], [http://www.mofa.go.jp/ICSFiles/afieldfile/2009/11/04/2009_Autumn_Conferment_of_Decorations_on_Foreign_Nationals.pdf "2009 Autumn Conferment of Decorations on Foreign Nationals," p. 9.]</ref> The art of this artist, who has long been based in Japan, is rooted in an Eastern appreciation of the nature of materials and also in modern European phenomenology. Lee, the main theorist of the [[Mono-ha]] (“School of Things”) tendency in Japan in the late 1960s and early 1970s, is more of a philosopher who expresses his ideas through art.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Gómez|first=Edward M.|title=Whose Modernism is it Anyway?|journal=The Brooklyn Rail|year=2011|month=July-August|url=http://brooklynrail.org/2011/07/artseen/whose-modernism-is-it-anyway}}</ref> He advocates a methodology of de-westernization and demodernization in both theory and practice as an antidote to the [[Eurocentric]] thought of 1960s [[postwar]] Japanese society. Lee divides his time between [[Kamakura]], Japan and Paris, France.


==Career==
'''Lee Ufan''' (born 1936 in [[Kyongnam]], [[Korea]]) is a [[Korean people|Korean]] [[artist]] and [[academic]], honored by the government of Japan for having "Contributed to the development of
Born in [[Haman County|Haman-gun]], Gyeongsangnam-do in 1936, Lee Ufan was raised by his parents and Confucianist grandfather. Lee studied painting at the College of Fine Arts at [[Seoul National University]] for just two months and, in 1956, moved to [[Yokohama]], Japan, where he earned a degree in philosophy in 1961.<ref>[http://www.guggenheim.org/new-york/exhibitions/on-view/lee-ufan ''Lee Ufan: Marking Infinity'', June 24 – September 28, 2011] Guggenheim Museum, New York.</ref> Whilst studying philosophy Ufan painted in a restrained, traditional Japanese style, eschewing the expressive abstraction of the contemporary Japanese [[Gutai]] movement.<ref>[http://www.tate.org.uk/servlet/ArtistWorks?cgroupid=999999961&artistid=2640&page=1&sole=y&collab=y&attr=y&sort=default&tabview=bio Lee Ufan] Tate Collection.</ref>
contemporary art in Japan."<ref name="mofa2009">[[Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Japan)|Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs]], [http://www.mofa.go.jp/ICSFiles/afieldfile/2009/11/04/2009_Autumn_Conferment_of_Decorations_on_Foreign_Nationals.pdf "2009 Autumn Conferment of Decorations on Foreign Nationals," p. 9.]</ref> The art of this Korean-born artist, who has long been based in Japan, is rooted in an Eastern appreciation of the nature of materials and also in modern European phenomenology. Lee, the main theorist of the [[Mono-ha]] (“School of Things”) tendency in Japan in the late 1960s and early 1970s, is more of a philosopher who expresses his ideas through art.<ref>{{cite journal|last=Gómez|first=Edward M.|title=Whose Modernism is it Anyway?|journal=The Brooklyn Rail|year=2011|month=July-August|url=http://brooklynrail.org/2011/07/artseen/whose-modernism-is-it-anyway}}</ref>


Lee spent his early working years pursuing careers as an art critic, philosopher, and artist.<ref>Benjamin Genocchio (May 15, 2011), [http://www.artinfo.com/news/story/37679/lee-ufan/ Lee Ufan] ''ARTINFO''.</ref> In Japan he became an active participant in the countercultural upheavals surrounding the [[Treaty_of_Mutual_Cooperation_and_Security_between_the_United_States_and_Japan#Opposition_movement|Anpo Movement]] of the 1960s.<ref>Ken Johnson (June 23, 2011), [http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/24/arts/design/lee-ufan-marking-infinity-at-the-guggenheim-review.html?_r=1&ref=design A Fine Line: Style or Philosophy] ''New York Times''.</ref> He came to prominence in the late 1960s as one of the founders and theoretical leaders of the avant garde Mono-ha (Object School) group.<ref>Nancy Kapitanoff (March 31, 1991), [http://articles.latimes.com/1991-03-31/entertainment/ca-2497_1_japanese-art-exhibition Japan Exports Different Perspective with Museum Exhibit] ''Los Angeles Times''.</ref> Mono-Ha was inspired by the [[Arte Povera]] movement of the 1960s and Japan's first contemporary art movement to gain international recognition. The Mono-Ha school of thought rejected [[Western world|Western]] notions of representation, choosing to focus on the relationships of materials and perceptions rather than on expression or intervention. The movement's goal was to embrace the world at large and encourage the fluid coexistence of numerous beings, concepts, and experiences. Lee U-fan's position in the philosophy department at [[Nihon]] University in [[Tokyo]] earned him a distinguished role as the movement's spokesman. In 1973, he was appointed Professor of [[Tama Art University]] in Tokyo and he stayed there until 2007.<ref>[http://www.ropac.net/exhibitions/2009_9_lee-ufan/?view=pressrelease Lee Ufan, September 3 - October 2, 2009] Galerie Thaddeus Ropac, Paris.</ref> [[Yoshio Itagaki]] was one of his students in 1989-1991. He is Professor emeritus at [[Tama Art University]].


Lee was also a pivotal figure in the Korean ''tansaekhwa'' (monochrome painting) school, which offered a fresh approach to minimalist abstraction by presenting repetitive gestural marks as bodily records of time’s perpetual passage.<ref>[http://www.guggenheim.org/new-york/exhibitions/on-view/lee-ufan ''Lee Ufan: Marking Infinity'', June 24 – September 28, 2011] Guggenheim Museum, New York.</ref> In his early painting series, ''From Point'' and ''From Line'' (1972–84), Lee combines ground mineral pigment with animal-skin glue, traditional to East Asian painting on silk. Each brushstroke is applied slowly and is composed of several layers. Where the brush first makes contact with the canvas, the paint is thick, forming a 'ridge' that gradually becomes lighter. Rarely does his brush touch the surface more than three times.<ref>[http://www.lissongallery.com/#/exhibitions/2008-04-02_lee-ufan/ Lee Ufan, April 2 - May 10, 2008] Lisson Gallery, London.</ref> The artist refers to this as ''yohaku'' or the art of emptiness.<ref>[Lee Ufan, ''From Line'', 1978] [[Christie's]] Post War and Contemporary Art Afternoon Session, 14 November 2007, New York.</ref> In the ''From Point'' works he adopted a similar method in order to produce a fading series of small, discrete, rectangular brushstokes.<ref>[http://www.tate.org.uk/servlet/ArtistWorks?cgroupid=999999961&artistid=2640&page=1&sole=y&collab=y&attr=y&sort=default&tabview=bio Lee Ufan] Tate Collection.</ref> In 1991 Lee began his series of ''Correspondance'' paintings, which consist of just one or two grey-blue brushstrokes, made of a mixture of oil and crushed stone pigment, applied onto a large white surface. On average it takes Lee about a month to finish a painting, on canvases that typically measure about 60 by 90&nbsp;inches, although they can vary in size from a few inches to 10 feet per side. He completes no more than 25 works a year.<ref>Benjamin Genocchio (May 15, 2011), [http://www.artinfo.com/news/story/37679/lee-ufan/ Lee Ufan] ''ARTINFO''.</ref>
==Career==
In 1956, Lee Ufan moved to [[Yokohama]], [[Japan]] and studied [[philosophy]]. In 1973, he became a professor at the [[List of universities in Japan|Tama Art University]] in [[Tokyo]]. Lee Ufan won the [[Praemium Imperiale]] prize for painting in 1996. The following year he was appointed guest professor at the [[École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts]] in [[Paris]].


[[File:Lee Ufan Relatum with four stones and four irons 1978.jpg|thumb|Lee Ufan Relatum with four stones and four irons 1978]]
His work has been featured at many museums including the [[Yokohama Museum of Art]] and the [[List of museums in Seoul|National Museum of Contemporary Art]] in [[Seoul]].
Lee's sculptures, presenting dispersed arrangements of stones together with industrial materials like steel plates, rubber sheets, and glass panes, recast the discrete object as a network of relations based on parity between the viewer, materials, and site. In his sculptural series ''Relatum'', each work consists of one or more light-colored round stones and dark, rectangular iron plates.<ref>[http://www.lissongallery.com/#/artists/lee-ufan/cv/ Lee Ufan] Lisson Gallery, London.</ref>


==Exhibitions==
Lee Ufan is represented by The [[Pace Gallery]] in New York.
From his first solo exhibition in Japan in 1967, Lee Ufan was invited by [[Manfred Schneckenburger]] to participate in [[Documenta]] VI (1977) in Kassel, and in 1969 and 1973 he represented Korea in the [[Bienal de São Paulo]].<ref>[http://www.lissongallery.com/#/exhibitions/2004-01-21_lee-ufan/ Lee Ufan, January 21 - February 28, 2004] Lisson Gallery, London.</ref> His work was included in the 1992 [[Tate Liverpool]] exhibition, "Working With Nature: Traditional Thought in Contemporary Art from Korea", the first major survey of Korean art shown in Britain.<ref>[http://www.tate.org.uk/liverpool/exhibitions/working-with-nature/default.shtm Tate Liverpool exhibition information]</ref> In 1997 he had a solo exhibition at the [[Jeu de Paume]], Paris and in 2001 the [[Kunstmuseum Bonn]] held a major retrospective of his work. Major exhibitions of Lee's painting and sculpture were later held at the [[Yokohama Museum of Art]] in 2005 and the [[Saint-Étienne|Musée d'art Moderne Saint-Etienne]] in France in December 2005. The Kunst Situation, a museum associated with [[Ruhr University Bochum]] in Germany, opened in 2006 with a gallery devoted to a permanent installation of Lee Ufan's paintings and a garden of his sculpture. However, it was Lee’s "Resonance" exhibition at Palazzo Palumbo Fossati during the 2007 [[Venice Biennale]] that won him critical acclaim and a wider audience.<ref>Benjamin Genocchio (May 15, 2011), [http://www.artinfo.com/news/story/37679/lee-ufan/ Lee Ufan] ''ARTINFO''.</ref>
[[File:Lee Ufan at Guggenheim.jpg|left|thumb|Ufan setting up his art at the Guggenheim.]]

In 2011, ''Lee Ufan: Marking Infinity'' was exhibited at the at the [[Solomon R. Gugghenheim Museum]] in [[New York City]], with over 90 works, from the 1960s to the present. Art critic [[Robert C. Morgan]] writes in [[The Brooklyn Rail]]: "What makes Lee Ufan’s work exhilarating is the structure—not in the pragmatic sense, but in the virtual/tactile sense; that is, the manner in which the 'weight' comes down to the gravity of seeing: we see and touch the work, less in actuality than conceptually."<ref>{{cite journal|last=Morgan|first=Robert C.|title=Lee Ufan: The Art of Present Reality|journal=The Brooklyn Rail|year=2011|month=Jul-Aug|url=http://brooklynrail.org/2011/07/artseen/lee-ufan-the-art-of-present-reality}}</ref>
In 2011, ''Lee Ufan: Marking Infinity'' was exhibited at the at the [[Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum]] in [[New York City]], with over 90 works, from the 1960s to the present. Art critic [[Robert C. Morgan]] writes in [[The Brooklyn Rail]]: "What makes Lee Ufan’s work exhilarating is the structure—not in the pragmatic sense, but in the virtual/tactile sense; that is, the manner in which the 'weight' comes down to the gravity of seeing: we see and touch the work, less in actuality than conceptually."<ref>{{cite journal|last=Morgan|first=Robert C.|title=Lee Ufan: The Art of Present Reality|journal=The Brooklyn Rail|year=2011|month=Jul-Aug|url=http://brooklynrail.org/2011/07/artseen/lee-ufan-the-art-of-present-reality}}</ref>

Lee’s primary dealers are [[Pace Gallery]], in New York; Kukje, in Seoul; Scai the Bathhouse, in Tokyo; and [[Lisson Gallery]], in London.

==Collections==
Lee is represented in major museum collections including: [[MoMA]], New York; [[Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum|Guggenheim Museum]], New York; [[Centre Georges Pompidou]], Paris; [[Tate Gallery]], London; [[Kröller-Müller Museum]], Otterlo Holland; the National Museums of Modern Art in Tokyo, Kyoto and Osaka; the [[Yokohama Museum of Art]] and the [[List of museums in Seoul|National Museum of Contemporary Art]] in [[Seoul]]. His work is also held in the permanent collection of the [[Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art]].<ref>[http://mothra.rerf.or.jp/ENG/Hiroshima-old/Art/Hiroshima-City-Museum.html Hiroshama City Museum of Contemporary Art website]</ref>

==Recognition==
In 1997, Lee was invited to serve as visiting professor at the [[Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts]] in Paris. He received the [[UNESCO Prize]] at the [[Shanghai Biennale]] in 2000; the Ho-Am Prize of the Samsung Foundation in Korea in 2001; and the 13th [[Praemium Imperiale]] for painting in 2001. In 2010, the Lee Ufan Museum, a building designed by [[Tadao Ando]] and operated by [[Benesse]], opened on the island of [[Naoshima]], Japan.<ref>[http://www.benesse-artsite.jp/en/lee-ufan/index.html Lee Ufan Museum]</ref>

==At auction==
Lee's paintings regularly fetch six-figure dollar sums at auction. A 1980 canvas with a series of vertical blue lines, for example, went for $410,000 at [[Sotheby's]] in New York in 2010.<ref>Edan Corkill (August 1, 2010), [http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/fl20100801x1.html Korean at the forefront of Japan's modern art] ''The Japan Times''.</ref>


==Honors==
==Honors==
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* [[Praemium Imperiale]], 2001.<ref>[http://www.jpf.go.jp/e/publish/periodic/jfn/pdf/jfn29_2.pdf "Cultural Highlights; From the Japanese Press (August 1–October 31, 2001),"] ''Japan Foundation Newsletter,'' Vol. XXIX, No. 2, p. 7.</ref>
* [[Praemium Imperiale]], 2001.<ref>[http://www.jpf.go.jp/e/publish/periodic/jfn/pdf/jfn29_2.pdf "Cultural Highlights; From the Japanese Press (August 1–October 31, 2001),"] ''Japan Foundation Newsletter,'' Vol. XXIX, No. 2, p. 7.</ref>


==Notes==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{Reflist|2}}


== Reviews ==
===Bibliography===
* Lee Ufan: ''The Art of Encounter'', London 2008.
* LG Williams, [[Tokyo weekender]], [http://weekenderjapan.com/?p=30630 "Lee Ufan: A single stroke is not enough"], February 9, 2011.
* S. von Berswordt-Wallrabe: ''Lee Ufan. Encounters with the Other'', Steidl, Goettingen, 2008.


== References ==
* [[Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Japan)|Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs]], [http://www.mofa.go.jp/ICSFiles/afieldfile/2009/11/04/2009_Autumn_Conferment_of_Decorations_on_Foreign_Nationals.pdf "2009 Autumn Conferment of Decorations on Foreign Nationals," p. 9.]

{{commonscat multi|Lee Ufan|Lee Ufan Museum}}
==External links==
==External links==
{{commonscat multi|Lee Ufan|Lee Ufan Museum}}
* [http://www.situation-kunst.de Situation Kunst (for Max Imdahl), Art Collections of Ruhr-University Bochum]
* [http://www.situation-kunst.de Situation Kunst (for Max Imdahl), Art Collections of Ruhr-University Bochum]
* [http://thepacegallery.com The Pace Gallery]
* [http://thepacegallery.com The Pace Gallery]
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* [http://www.artnet.com/artist/170092/Lee_Ufan.html Lee Ufan on artnet]
* [http://www.artnet.com/artist/170092/Lee_Ufan.html Lee Ufan on artnet]
* [http://www.lorenzelliarte.com/index.html?pg=2&lang=en&id=80&pos=8&step=72 Lorenzelli Arte: Lee Ufan Biography]
* [http://www.lorenzelliarte.com/index.html?pg=2&lang=en&id=80&pos=8&step=72 Lorenzelli Arte: Lee Ufan Biography]
* [[Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Japan)|Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs]], [http://www.mofa.go.jp/ICSFiles/afieldfile/2009/11/04/2009_Autumn_Conferment_of_Decorations_on_Foreign_Nationals.pdf "2009 Autumn Conferment of Decorations on Foreign Nationals," p. 9.]
* LG Williams, [[Tokyo weekender]], [http://weekenderjapan.com/?p=30630 "Lee Ufan: A single stroke is not enough"], February 9, 2011.


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Revision as of 22:04, 31 May 2012

Ufan setting up his art at the Guggenheim.

Lee Ufan (born 1936 in Haman County, in the south of the Korean Peninsula) is a Korean[1] minimalist painter and sculptor[2] artist and academic, honored by the government of Japan for having "contributed to the development of contemporary art in Japan."[3] The art of this artist, who has long been based in Japan, is rooted in an Eastern appreciation of the nature of materials and also in modern European phenomenology. Lee, the main theorist of the Mono-ha (“School of Things”) tendency in Japan in the late 1960s and early 1970s, is more of a philosopher who expresses his ideas through art.[4] He advocates a methodology of de-westernization and demodernization in both theory and practice as an antidote to the Eurocentric thought of 1960s postwar Japanese society. Lee divides his time between Kamakura, Japan and Paris, France.

Career

Born in Haman-gun, Gyeongsangnam-do in 1936, Lee Ufan was raised by his parents and Confucianist grandfather. Lee studied painting at the College of Fine Arts at Seoul National University for just two months and, in 1956, moved to Yokohama, Japan, where he earned a degree in philosophy in 1961.[5] Whilst studying philosophy Ufan painted in a restrained, traditional Japanese style, eschewing the expressive abstraction of the contemporary Japanese Gutai movement.[6]

Lee spent his early working years pursuing careers as an art critic, philosopher, and artist.[7] In Japan he became an active participant in the countercultural upheavals surrounding the Anpo Movement of the 1960s.[8] He came to prominence in the late 1960s as one of the founders and theoretical leaders of the avant garde Mono-ha (Object School) group.[9] Mono-Ha was inspired by the Arte Povera movement of the 1960s and Japan's first contemporary art movement to gain international recognition. The Mono-Ha school of thought rejected Western notions of representation, choosing to focus on the relationships of materials and perceptions rather than on expression or intervention. The movement's goal was to embrace the world at large and encourage the fluid coexistence of numerous beings, concepts, and experiences. Lee U-fan's position in the philosophy department at Nihon University in Tokyo earned him a distinguished role as the movement's spokesman. In 1973, he was appointed Professor of Tama Art University in Tokyo and he stayed there until 2007.[10] Yoshio Itagaki was one of his students in 1989-1991. He is Professor emeritus at Tama Art University.

Lee was also a pivotal figure in the Korean tansaekhwa (monochrome painting) school, which offered a fresh approach to minimalist abstraction by presenting repetitive gestural marks as bodily records of time’s perpetual passage.[11] In his early painting series, From Point and From Line (1972–84), Lee combines ground mineral pigment with animal-skin glue, traditional to East Asian painting on silk. Each brushstroke is applied slowly and is composed of several layers. Where the brush first makes contact with the canvas, the paint is thick, forming a 'ridge' that gradually becomes lighter. Rarely does his brush touch the surface more than three times.[12] The artist refers to this as yohaku or the art of emptiness.[13] In the From Point works he adopted a similar method in order to produce a fading series of small, discrete, rectangular brushstokes.[14] In 1991 Lee began his series of Correspondance paintings, which consist of just one or two grey-blue brushstrokes, made of a mixture of oil and crushed stone pigment, applied onto a large white surface. On average it takes Lee about a month to finish a painting, on canvases that typically measure about 60 by 90 inches, although they can vary in size from a few inches to 10 feet per side. He completes no more than 25 works a year.[15]

Lee Ufan Relatum with four stones and four irons 1978

Lee's sculptures, presenting dispersed arrangements of stones together with industrial materials like steel plates, rubber sheets, and glass panes, recast the discrete object as a network of relations based on parity between the viewer, materials, and site. In his sculptural series Relatum, each work consists of one or more light-colored round stones and dark, rectangular iron plates.[16]

Exhibitions

From his first solo exhibition in Japan in 1967, Lee Ufan was invited by Manfred Schneckenburger to participate in Documenta VI (1977) in Kassel, and in 1969 and 1973 he represented Korea in the Bienal de São Paulo.[17] His work was included in the 1992 Tate Liverpool exhibition, "Working With Nature: Traditional Thought in Contemporary Art from Korea", the first major survey of Korean art shown in Britain.[18] In 1997 he had a solo exhibition at the Jeu de Paume, Paris and in 2001 the Kunstmuseum Bonn held a major retrospective of his work. Major exhibitions of Lee's painting and sculpture were later held at the Yokohama Museum of Art in 2005 and the Musée d'art Moderne Saint-Etienne in France in December 2005. The Kunst Situation, a museum associated with Ruhr University Bochum in Germany, opened in 2006 with a gallery devoted to a permanent installation of Lee Ufan's paintings and a garden of his sculpture. However, it was Lee’s "Resonance" exhibition at Palazzo Palumbo Fossati during the 2007 Venice Biennale that won him critical acclaim and a wider audience.[19]

In 2011, Lee Ufan: Marking Infinity was exhibited at the at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York City, with over 90 works, from the 1960s to the present. Art critic Robert C. Morgan writes in The Brooklyn Rail: "What makes Lee Ufan’s work exhilarating is the structure—not in the pragmatic sense, but in the virtual/tactile sense; that is, the manner in which the 'weight' comes down to the gravity of seeing: we see and touch the work, less in actuality than conceptually."[20]

Lee’s primary dealers are Pace Gallery, in New York; Kukje, in Seoul; Scai the Bathhouse, in Tokyo; and Lisson Gallery, in London.

Collections

Lee is represented in major museum collections including: MoMA, New York; Guggenheim Museum, New York; Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; Tate Gallery, London; Kröller-Müller Museum, Otterlo Holland; the National Museums of Modern Art in Tokyo, Kyoto and Osaka; the Yokohama Museum of Art and the National Museum of Contemporary Art in Seoul. His work is also held in the permanent collection of the Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art.[21]

Recognition

In 1997, Lee was invited to serve as visiting professor at the Ecole Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-Arts in Paris. He received the UNESCO Prize at the Shanghai Biennale in 2000; the Ho-Am Prize of the Samsung Foundation in Korea in 2001; and the 13th Praemium Imperiale for painting in 2001. In 2010, the Lee Ufan Museum, a building designed by Tadao Ando and operated by Benesse, opened on the island of Naoshima, Japan.[22]

At auction

Lee's paintings regularly fetch six-figure dollar sums at auction. A 1980 canvas with a series of vertical blue lines, for example, went for $410,000 at Sotheby's in New York in 2010.[23]

Honors

References

  1. ^ 돌·쇠’로 우주 삼라만상 얘기할 수 있더라 (Aug 27, 2009), [1] Hankyoreh.
  2. ^ Felicity Fenner, Art in America, July, 2003,
  3. ^ a b Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs, "2009 Autumn Conferment of Decorations on Foreign Nationals," p. 9.
  4. ^ Gómez, Edward M. (2011). "Whose Modernism is it Anyway?". The Brooklyn Rail. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  5. ^ Lee Ufan: Marking Infinity, June 24 – September 28, 2011 Guggenheim Museum, New York.
  6. ^ Lee Ufan Tate Collection.
  7. ^ Benjamin Genocchio (May 15, 2011), Lee Ufan ARTINFO.
  8. ^ Ken Johnson (June 23, 2011), A Fine Line: Style or Philosophy New York Times.
  9. ^ Nancy Kapitanoff (March 31, 1991), Japan Exports Different Perspective with Museum Exhibit Los Angeles Times.
  10. ^ Lee Ufan, September 3 - October 2, 2009 Galerie Thaddeus Ropac, Paris.
  11. ^ Lee Ufan: Marking Infinity, June 24 – September 28, 2011 Guggenheim Museum, New York.
  12. ^ Lee Ufan, April 2 - May 10, 2008 Lisson Gallery, London.
  13. ^ [Lee Ufan, From Line, 1978] Christie's Post War and Contemporary Art Afternoon Session, 14 November 2007, New York.
  14. ^ Lee Ufan Tate Collection.
  15. ^ Benjamin Genocchio (May 15, 2011), Lee Ufan ARTINFO.
  16. ^ Lee Ufan Lisson Gallery, London.
  17. ^ Lee Ufan, January 21 - February 28, 2004 Lisson Gallery, London.
  18. ^ Tate Liverpool exhibition information
  19. ^ Benjamin Genocchio (May 15, 2011), Lee Ufan ARTINFO.
  20. ^ Morgan, Robert C. (2011). "Lee Ufan: The Art of Present Reality". The Brooklyn Rail. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  21. ^ Hiroshama City Museum of Contemporary Art website
  22. ^ Lee Ufan Museum
  23. ^ Edan Corkill (August 1, 2010), Korean at the forefront of Japan's modern art The Japan Times.
  24. ^ "Cultural Highlights; From the Japanese Press (August 1–October 31, 2001)," Japan Foundation Newsletter, Vol. XXIX, No. 2, p. 7.

Bibliography

  • Lee Ufan: The Art of Encounter, London 2008.
  • S. von Berswordt-Wallrabe: Lee Ufan. Encounters with the Other, Steidl, Goettingen, 2008.

External links

Template:Persondata