Hong Song-dam

Hong Song-dam
Hangul
홍성담
Hanja
Revised RomanizationHong Seongdam
McCune–ReischauerHong Sŏng-dam

Hong Song-dam (Korean홍성담; Hanja洪性淡; born 1955) is a South Korean artist specializing in woodcuts and best known for his involvement in the Minjung movement. He was born on the island of Hauido and raised in Gwangju, where he took part in the 1980 uprising against Chun Doo-hwan's military dictatorship. He became well known for making prints related to the acts committed by the government under Chun in Seoul, leading to much controversy surrounding his art.[1] After the Gwangju Uprising he became politically active, and in July 1989 was arrested for allegedly breaking the National Security Act (he had sent slides of a mural he had created, along with around 200 other South Korean artists, to North Korea). Amnesty International adopted him as a prisoner of conscience, and he was released from prison in the early 1990s. He is an acclaimed member of the Minjung art movement, and in 1996 was commissioned by the Government of South Korea to create a 42-metre mural for Chonnam National University.

  1. ^ "Resistance is not always the whole picture: Hong Sung Dam's Dawn woodcuts and the Gwangju uprising". World Socialist Web Site. 2004-02-03. Retrieved 2023-05-26.