Yun-Jung Song

Yun-Jung Song

Yun-Jung Song is a Korean ceramicist and artist based in Strasbourg, France. After learning different ceramic techniques in Korea, Yun-Jung wanted to explore other horizons. First at the School of Decorative Arts in Strasbourg, then in Paris, at the Sorbonne University, she explores different fields of art. She continued her initiatory journey by trying all sorts of techniques and mediums, before returning to ceramics in 2008.

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Yun-Jung Song is a Korean ceramicist and artist based in Strasbourg, France. After learning different ceramic techniques in Korea, Yun-Jung wanted to explore other horizons. First at the School of Decorative Arts in Strasbourg, then in Paris, at the Sorbonne University, she explores different fields of art. She continued her initiatory journey by trying all sorts of techniques and mediums, before returning to ceramics in 2008. Yun-Jung weaves worlds, intimate languages ​​between humans and the earth, in which we perceive the slowness of time, offering us a reflection of her inner emotions. Her work is marked by the influence of a Buddhist culture and the shamanistic rituals of Korea. Through her creations, half-children, half-animals, Yun-Jung speaks philosophy: "Human beings are not alone, the nature that surrounds them is essential, they must respect places, space, and spirit." Her sculptures are a delicate tangle of bear or bird heads, painted branches that curl, enveloping, which she draws from the memories of her childhood, revealing to us a marvelous animal world.
  • Yun-Jung Song is a Korean ceramicist and artist based in Strasbourg, France. After learning different ceramic techniques in Korea, Yun-Jung wanted to explore other horizons. First at the School of Decorative Arts in Strasbourg, then in Paris, at the Sorbonne University, she explores different fields of art. She continued her initiatory journey by trying all sorts of techniques and mediums, before returning to ceramics in 2008. Yun-Jung weaves worlds, intimate languages ​​between humans and the earth, in which we perceive the slowness of time, offering us a reflection of her inner emotions. Her work is marked by the influence of a Buddhist culture and the shamanistic rituals of Korea. Through her creations, half-children, half-animals, Yun-Jung speaks philosophy: "Human beings are not alone, the nature that surrounds them is essential, they must respect places, space, and spirit." Her sculptures are a delicate tangle of bear or bird heads, painted branches that curl, enveloping, which she draws from the memories of her childhood, revealing to us a marvelous animal world.