Nikki S. Lee

For the Japanese American musician named Nikki Lee, see Nikki (singer).
Nikki S. Lee

On the March 2007 cover of KoreAm
Born 1970 (age 4445)
South Korea
Nationality Korean
Known for Photography
Awards The Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Award
Korean name
Hangul 이승희[1]
Revised Romanization Yi Seunghui
McCune–Reischauer Yi Sǔnghui

Nikki Seung-hee Lee (born 1970) is a Korean photographer and filmmaker formerly based in New York City, now living and working in Seoul.

Education

After earning a Bachelor of Fine Arts at Chung-Ang University in South Korea in 1993, she moved to New York in 1994 to attend the Fashion Institute of Technology. She earned her Master of Arts in photography at New York University in 1998.[2]

Work

Projects, 1997–2001

Lee's most noted work, Projects (1997–2001), begun while still in school, depicts her in snapshot photographs, in which she poses with various ethnic and social groups, including drag queens, punks, swing dancers, senior citizens, Latinos, hip-hop musicians and fans, skateboarders, lesbians, young urban professionals, and Korean schoolgirls. She immerses herself into each American sub-cultures and creates an identity that is an extension of herself. With a simple point-and-shoot camera, she asks the selected group or passerby to record her.[3] Lee conceives of her work as less about creating beautiful pictures, and more about investigating notions of identity and the uses of vernacular photography.[4] Lee has stated that the project was one of her graduation requirements.[5]

In 1999 Lee's first solo exhibition took place at Leslie Tonkonow Artworks + Projects, New York which was her exclusive representative from 1998 through the fall of 2007.

2002–present

A more recent series by Lee, entitled Parts (2002–2005) features images of Lee posing in different settings with a male partner, cropped to make it impossible to directly see who she is with.[6]

In 2006 Lee released a film, A.K.A. Nikki S. Lee. The project, described as a "conceptual documentary," alternates segments presenting Lee as two distinct personalities, a reserved academic and an outgoing socialite. It had its premiere at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, October 5–7, 2006.[7]

Lee has had solo exhibitions of her work at major international institutions including the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco, the Museum of Contemporary Photography[8] in Chicago, the Cleveland Museum of Art and the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City. Her works are in the collections of major museums, including the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.; the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; the Milwaukee Art Museum; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; the Fukuoka Asian Art Museum in Fukuoka, Japan; and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York.

Writing on Lee's work have appeared in many magazines, newspapers, and journals including Artforum, Art in America, Art Journal, and the New York Times. Two monographs on Lee's work have been published: Nikki S. Lee: Parts. by RoseLee Goldberg and Nikki S. Lee: Projects. essays by Russell Ferguson and Gilbert Vicario .

References

  1. Yi Nam-hui (July 2011), "뉴욕이 주목한 아티스트 니키 리 [Noted New York artist Nikki Lee]", The Dong-A Ilbo (622): 310–315, retrieved 2011-09-29
  2. Amanda Allison (2009), ""Identity in Flux": Exploring the Work of Nikki S. Lee", Art Education (62): 25–31
  3. "Nikki S. Lee". National Museum of Women in the Arts. Retrieved 23 April 2014.
  4. Smith, Cherise (2011). Enacting Others : Politics of Identity in Eleanor Antin, Nikki S. Lee, Adrian Piper, and Anna Deavere Smith. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. p. 205.
  5. Lee, Phil (January 2008), ""Indefinite "Nikkis" in a World of Hyperreality: An Interview with Nikki S. Lee."", Chicago Art Journal 18: 76–93
  6. Miller, J. Macneill (September 2007), "The Impersonal Album: Chronicling Life in the Digital Age.", Afterimage 35 (2): 9–12
  7. Lee, Phil (January 2008), ""Indefinite "Nikkis" in a World of Hyperreality: An Interview with Nikki S. Lee."", Chicago Art Journal 18: 76–93
  8. Rosenfeld, Catherine (December 2001), "Nikki S. Lee: The Museum of Contemporary Photography, Columbia College, Chicago", New Art Examiner 29 (2): 91–92

External links