[Collection of prints by Jung Won-chul from the exhibition Chŏbŏ tul su ŏmnŭn iyagi].

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Jung, Won-chul, 1960- artist.
Imprint:[Korea], [1998]
Description:3 prints : ink on paper ; 75 x 56 cm
Language:No linguistic content
Subject:
Format: Image LP Print
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12774284
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Physical medium:paper
ink
printing
Notes:Collective title devised by cataloger.
Prints [1] and [2] are artist's proofs. Each print was part of a set of 20 prints. The first two numbers written in pencil at the bottom of the image refer to the year (1998), and final two numbers refer to the the assigned number within the set of 20.
Won-chul Jung (born 1960) is a Korean artist. He received a BFA in western painting from Hongik University, Seoul, and a Diploma in Fine Arts from the University of Kassel, Germany. He has exhibited his artwork in both individual and group exhibitions in Korea and abroad.
Summary:3 prints that were made by the Korean artist Jung Won-chul for an exhibition about "comfort women" in colonial Korea under Japanese rule entitled "Stories that can't be put aside" (Chŏbŏ tul su ŏmnŭn iyagi, 접어둘 수 없는 이야기), sometimes also called "The testimony" or "A story that cannot be set aside" in English. For this exhibit, which featured four sections and was inspired by a memoir by one of the survivors, Jung etched the images into compressed rubber plates using a dental drill before pressing those etchings in black and white onto lead plates.