Miru Kim
Miru Kim | |
---|---|
Miru Kim exploring the Paris Catacombs | |
Born |
1981 Stoneham, Massachusetts, US |
Nationality | Korean-American |
Education |
Phillips Academy Columbia University Pratt Institute |
Known for | Photography, illustration, urban exploration |
Website |
www |
Miru Kim is an artist, photographer, illustrator, and arts events coordinator, who has explored, documented, and photographed various urban settings such as abandoned subway stations, tunnels, the Croton aqueduct, Paris catacombs, factories, hospitals, and shipyards.
Education
Kim was born in Stoneham, Massachusetts in 1981 but was raised in Seoul, Korea. She returned to Massachusetts in 1995 to attend Phillips Academy in Andover, and later moved to New York City in 1999 to attend Columbia University. In 2006, she received an MFA in painting from Pratt Institute.[1]
Career
Kim's Naked City Spleen series of photographs include images of herself nude in these settings. For her new series, called The Pig That Therefore I Am, she has visited industrial hog farms and immersed herself amongst the pigs. She is the daughter of contemporary South Korean philosopher Young-Oak Kim (aka Do-ol).
Kim was featured in Esquire's 2007 Best and Brightest issue[2]
The Financial Times of London included Kim in an article titled "We'll climb that bridge when we get to it" [3] about "urban explorers", people who scale bridges and roam subway tunnels, storm drains, derelict factories, sewers, steam vents and other forbidden city infrastructure.
See also
Notes
- ↑ mirukim.com bio page .
- ↑ Colby Buzzell, "Miru Kim Takes Pictures", Esquire, 20 November 2007.
- ↑ John O'Connor, "We'll climb that bridge when we get to it", 14 December 2007
External links
- Kim's web site
- Buzzell, Colby. "Miru Kim Takes Pictures". Esquire, 20 November 2007.
- Gibberd, Ben. "Children of Darkness". New York Times, 29 July 2007.
- Miru Kim's photos
- O'Connor, John. "We'll climb that bridge when we get to it". Financial Times, 14 December 2007.
- TED Talks: Miru Kim's underground art of New York's urban ruins at TED in 2008