Ahn Jun

Ahn Jun (안준) is a South Korean photographer, known primarily for her Self-Portrait series of photographs taken from atop high buildings. She has worked extensively in the United States, particularly in New York, as well as South Korea.

Career

Ahn was educated at the University of Southern California, graduating with a degree in art history in 2006, followed by two years of postgraduate study of photography at the Pratt Institute. While at the Pratt, she had her first work displayed as part of group gallery exhibitions,[1] and began work on the Self-Portrait project.[2]

In 2009 and in 2010 she was awarded the Dean's Scholarship at Parsons The New School for Design, and in 2011 received both the Dean's and a departmental scholarship. During this time her work received its first major exhibitions, including a joint exhibition with Kazue Taguchi at PS 122 in New York. The Parsons awarded her a Master of Fine Arts with honors in January 2012, following which she enrolled in a PhD program in photography at Hongik University in Seoul.[1]

Work

Ahn's work involves three major projects; Invisible Seascape, Float, and Self-Portrait.[2]

Self-Portrait, the most prominent, is a series of photographs of Ahn on or near the top of skyscrapers, often leaning from a window or seated on a ledge. Some are taken from a first-person perspective, showing her legs dangling into space as she looks down. The project stemmed from a photograph of her feet she took while sitting on the edge of an apartment building while a student at Pratt, and has continued since then.[2] The bulk of the photographs are from New York and Seoul, with some from Hong Kong.[3]

For these photographs, Ahn works by gaining access to the building legitimately - it can take several months for the owners to give permission for the project - and setting a digital camera to take a large volume of high-speed images while she poses. These are then sifted to find a picture depicting Ahn looking unconcerned or distracted, captured in what she describes as "...a certain moment of time that did exist, but which we couldn't perceive with the naked eye because it happened too fast."[2]

Ahn uses a harness for some first-person shots, and responds to criticism of the safety of the project simply by saying that she "always tries to be careful".[4]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Resume, AhnJun.com
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Smyth, Diane. "Ones to watch: Jun Ahn". British Journal of Photography. Retrieved 31 January 2013.
  3. "Vertigo-inducing self portrait photographs by death-defying 'rooftopper' Jun Ahn". Telegraph. Retrieved 31 January 2013.
  4. Wakeley, Theodora (30 January 2013). "Ahn Jun's self-portraits are a high art". The Guardian. Retrieved 31 January 2013.

External links