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Connect, BTS is a global art exhibition launched by South Korean boy band BTS and its label Big Hit Entertainment in January 2020, directed by curator Lee Dae-hyung and featuring various works of contemporary art. [1] The project, which involves 22 artists and galleries opened in five cities ( London, Berlin, Buenos Aires, Seoul and New York), [2] [3] is a collaboration of curators who "resonated with BTS' philosophy" and "aims to redefine the relationships between art and music, the material and immaterial, artists and their audiences, artists and artists, theory and practice." [4] [5]
It’s not just art, but a deeper and cultural experience that we hope people get to see. The ultimate message is ‘let’s all do it together and accept our diversity.’ [6]
< under construction >
I think it's dangerous to think that art has a message to give. I think that art is a place. Art is a place where we can maybe sense our own being in a more direct way than anything else ... I think art is a special place. It's an open place, hopefully, where we can feel our own energy, our own vitality, and our own being in a special way. [25]
— Sir Antony Gormley, in an interview by BTS
< under construction >
In January 2020, BTS launched "Connect, BTS", ahead of their upcoming studio album, Map of the Soul: 7. "Connect, BTS" is a global public art project involving 22 contemporary artists across five cities: London, Berlin, Buenos Aires, Seoul and New York. [31] Galleries in these cities will host artistic events throughout January until the end of March. According to the "Connect, BTS" website, the project has been developed by international curators who "resonated with BTS' philosophy" and "aims to redefine the relationships between art and music, the material and immaterial, artists and their audiences, artists and artists, theory and practice." [4] The project kicked off on January 14 at London's Serpentine Galleries with the launch of "Catharsis", a digital recreation of an ancient forest by Danish artist Jakob Kudsk Steensen. [31] Other works will include a "drawing in space" on New York's Brooklyn Bridge by British sculptor Antony Gormley using 11 kilometres of aluminium tubing. [32] In Argentina, according to the BBC, Tomás Saraceno will "float" a human into the sky using a solar-powered balloon. In Seoul, the Dongdaemun Design Plaza will feature installations by British artist Ann Veronica Janssens and Korean artist Yiyun Kang which will be "re-imagining of BTS' signature dance movements" while a performance art program called "Rituals of Care" with 17 artists will be hosted in Berlin's Martin-Gropius-Bau. [33]
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![]() | This is not a Wikipedia article: It is an individual user's work-in-progress page, and may be incomplete and/or unreliable. For guidance on developing this draft, see
Wikipedia:So you made a userspace draft. Find sources:
Google (
books ·
news ·
scholar ·
free images ·
WP refs) ·
FENS ·
JSTOR ·
TWL |
Connect, BTS is a global art exhibition launched by South Korean boy band BTS and its label Big Hit Entertainment in January 2020, directed by curator Lee Dae-hyung and featuring various works of contemporary art. [1] The project, which involves 22 artists and galleries opened in five cities ( London, Berlin, Buenos Aires, Seoul and New York), [2] [3] is a collaboration of curators who "resonated with BTS' philosophy" and "aims to redefine the relationships between art and music, the material and immaterial, artists and their audiences, artists and artists, theory and practice." [4] [5]
It’s not just art, but a deeper and cultural experience that we hope people get to see. The ultimate message is ‘let’s all do it together and accept our diversity.’ [6]
< under construction >
I think it's dangerous to think that art has a message to give. I think that art is a place. Art is a place where we can maybe sense our own being in a more direct way than anything else ... I think art is a special place. It's an open place, hopefully, where we can feel our own energy, our own vitality, and our own being in a special way. [25]
— Sir Antony Gormley, in an interview by BTS
< under construction >
In January 2020, BTS launched "Connect, BTS", ahead of their upcoming studio album, Map of the Soul: 7. "Connect, BTS" is a global public art project involving 22 contemporary artists across five cities: London, Berlin, Buenos Aires, Seoul and New York. [31] Galleries in these cities will host artistic events throughout January until the end of March. According to the "Connect, BTS" website, the project has been developed by international curators who "resonated with BTS' philosophy" and "aims to redefine the relationships between art and music, the material and immaterial, artists and their audiences, artists and artists, theory and practice." [4] The project kicked off on January 14 at London's Serpentine Galleries with the launch of "Catharsis", a digital recreation of an ancient forest by Danish artist Jakob Kudsk Steensen. [31] Other works will include a "drawing in space" on New York's Brooklyn Bridge by British sculptor Antony Gormley using 11 kilometres of aluminium tubing. [32] In Argentina, according to the BBC, Tomás Saraceno will "float" a human into the sky using a solar-powered balloon. In Seoul, the Dongdaemun Design Plaza will feature installations by British artist Ann Veronica Janssens and Korean artist Yiyun Kang which will be "re-imagining of BTS' signature dance movements" while a performance art program called "Rituals of Care" with 17 artists will be hosted in Berlin's Martin-Gropius-Bau. [33]
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