exhibits

V&A celebrates ‘Korean Wave’ of popular culture with new exhibition

Reuters

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

V&A celebrates ‘Korean Wave’ of popular culture with new exhibition

A gallery assistant looks at "Upstairs and downstairs: Parasite" during a press view of "Hallyu! The Korean Wave" exhibition at the V&A in London, Britain, September 21, 2022.

REUTERS/Tom Nicholson

Among the items on display at 'Hallyu! The Korean Wave' exhibit in London are K-Pop costumes, K-drama props as well as a replica of the bathroom set in 'Parasite'

LONDON, United Kingdom – From the bright pink guard costumes in hit Netflix series Squid Game to a large sculpture of rapper G-Dragon, London’s V&A museum is celebrating South Korean popular culture and its rise to global prominence in a new exhibition opening this week.

Among the items on display at “Hallyu! The Korean Wave” are K-Pop costumes, K-drama props as well as a replica of the bathroom set in Oscar-winning film Parasite.

“This exhibition is actually celebrating the vibrant and colorful popular culture from South Korea from its inception to its place on the global stage,” curator Rosalie Kim told Reuters at a preview on Wednesday, September 21.

“‘Hallyu’ actually means Korean wave and it refers to this meteoric rise of popular culture from South Korea that has taken the world by storm in the past few decades.”

The exhibition is split into different sections including K-pop and its fans, television drama and cinema, fashion and beauty.

Greeting visitors is the pink jacket singer Psy wore in the music video for his 2012 mega hit “Gangnam Style”. Other outfits on display include ensembles worn by G-Dragon and K-pop groups ATEEZ and aespa as well as colorful designer creations.

From the world of television, there are costumes from historical dramas as well as the recognizable pink boiler suits and a green tracksuit from Squid Game.

The Parasite bathroom replica is the first time the set from the protagonist Kim family’s basement flat has been recreated, with the museum working closely with the film’s production designer Lee Ha-jun.

Other items on display include photographs, posters, record covers and K-pop fan banners. Visitors can also take part in an interactive K-pop dance challenge.

“Hallyu! The Korean Wave” opens on Saturday, September 25 and runs until June.– Rappler.com 

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!