U-ram Choe | |
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Born | 1970 (age 53–54) |
Nationality | South Korean |
Education | Chungang University |
Known for | Kinetic Sculpture |
Awards | Kim Sechoong Sculpture Award, POSCO Steel Art Award |
U-ram Choe | |
Hangul | 최우람 |
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Revised Romanization | Choe U-ram |
McCune–Reischauer | C'hoi U-ram |
U-Ram Choe (born 1970) is an artist based in Seoul, South Korea.
Integrating both mechanical and computerized movements within his sculptures ever since the late 1990s, Choe's works push the genre of moving kinetic art toward its newer-generation iterations, such as robotic art.[1] His sculptures' skeletal systems often expose the mechanisms of its movement by laying bare its machine of motors, gears, and drives, while minimally relying upon a CPU to direct their system.[2]: 125 Many of these mechanical elements—bolts, nuts, bearings—are all custom-made; at the same time, the external materials are often hand-crafted with special finishes.[2]: 122, 125
Often referred to as a sculptor who creates mechanical life,[3] Choe models the movement of many of his works after living creatures,[2]: 123 [4]: 364 but also fantastically combines elements of different lifeforms.[2]: 125 Though the focus of Choe's practice has shifted from animal life to human society in recent years,[5]: 10–11 across the arc of his practice the machine has served as a both reflection of human desire and an extension of humankind.[6]: 110
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