Jean Shin

Born:
1971
Residence:
Brooklyn, New York, USA
Nationality:
South Korean
Trust:
APT New York
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PRESS & PUBLICATIONS

  • It was “March Madness” at downtown gallery Fort Gansevoort on Thursday — although some of the artists in the sports-centered show that shares its name with the NCAA basketball playoffs weren’t necessarily following the tournament.

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  • The week is of course dominated by two news items: The Whitney Biennial and The Wintery Downfall.

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  • In her studio in the Red Hook neighbourhood of Brooklyn, Jean Shin puts keyboard keys on a large mat the size of a kitchen table.

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  • The Second Avenue Subway opened earlier this month, with artwork by Chuck Close, Jean Shin, Sarah Sze, and Vik Muniz, and something strange happened: New Yorkers didn't complain. Instead, city dwellers welcomed new offerings like Close's mosaics of musician Lou Reed and Muniz's Perfect Strangers, which celebrates the diversity of New York City and features what is believed to be the first permanent, not explicitly political art installation in NY to depict a gay couple.

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  • This week it was all about public installations for Art21 artists. Jenny Holzer’s text piece for the New York City AIDS memorial officially opened to the public.

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  • [W]hen commuters descend into the new Second Avenue subway’s four stations, at 96th, 86th, 72nd and 63rd Streets, now set for New Year’s Day — or perhaps a little later if things don’t go as planned — they will find one of the most ambitious contemporary art projects in tile work that the Metropolitan Transportation Authority has ever undertaken.

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  • Recycled rebar will make the Seattle North Transfer Station more beautiful

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  • Second Avenue subway in New York, sometimes referred to as “The Line That Time Forgot,” has been in the works for more than 75 years.

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  • While the weather has cooled considerably with the onset of fall, the southern states continue to sizzle with the hottest art exhibitions and events. We’re marking our calendars and heading for the (presumably) sunnier states to see some of the season’s most varied exhibits below the Mason-Dixon line. Whatever your taste, we’ve got you covered...here's our round-up of the hottest shows sure to please every art-loving palate: MutualArt.com's top 10 southern highlights selection!

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  • Second Avenue subway in New York, sometimes referred to as “The Line That Time Forgot,” has been in the works for more than 75 years.

    Read More
  • While the weather has cooled considerably with the onset of fall, the southern states continue to sizzle with the hottest art exhibitions and events. We’re marking our calendars and heading for the (presumably) sunnier states to see some of the season’s most varied exhibits below the Mason-Dixon line. Whatever your taste, we’ve got you covered...here's our round-up of the hottest shows sure to please every art-loving palate: MutualArt.com's top 10 southern highlights selection!

    Read More
  • When a host takes out the good silverware, it signals the party is important, right?

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  • Famed painter Chuck Close has been commissioned to install a roughly $1 million giant work of mosaics, a series of portraits representative of the city’s straphangers, at the East 86th Street subway station, according to officials from the MTA’s Arts for Transit.

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BIOGRAPHY

Jean Shin (b. 1971, Seoul) attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Skowhegan, Maine, in 1999 and received an M.S. in the Theory, Criticism & History of Art, Design & Architecture in 1996, as well as a BFA in painting in 1994, from the Pratt Institute in New York.

Jean Shin is nationally recognized for her monumental installations that transform everyday objects into elegant expressions of identity and community. For each project, she amasses vast collections of a particular object—prescription pill bottles, sports trophies, sweaters—which are often sourced through donations from individuals in a participating community. These intimate objects then become the materials for her conceptually rich sculptures, videos and site-specific installations. Distinguished by her meticulous, labor-intensive process, and her engagement of community, Shin’s arresting installations reflect individuals’ personal lives as well as collective issues that we face as a society.

 
Her work has been widely exhibited in major national and international museums, including in solo exhibitions at the Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art in Arizona (2010), Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington DC (2009), the Fabric Workshop and Museum in Philadelphia (2006), and Projects at The Museum of Modern Art in New York (2004).
 
Other venues have been the New Museum of Contemporary Art, the Museum of Art and Design, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Asia Society and Museum, The Brooklyn Museum, Sculpture Center, Socrates Sculpture Park, and Frederieke Taylor Gallery in New York City. Site-specific permanent installations have been commissioned by the US General Services Administration Art in Architecture Award, New York City’s Percent for the Arts and MTA Art for Transit. She has received numerous awards, including the New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship in Architecture/Environmental Structures (2008) and Sculpture (2003), Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant, and Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Biennial Art Award. Her works have been featured in many publications, including Frieze Art, Flash Art, Tema Celeste, Art in America, Sculpture Magazine, Artnews, and The New York Times.
 
She lives and works in New York City.

For additional information about this artist, visit Mutual Art