S.Korea unveils late Samsung boss Lee Kun-hee's 23,000 piece art collection
Two exhibitions of the items opened in Seoul on Wednesday, just months after the businessman's family announced the donation as it seeks to settle an inheritance tax bill of over 12 trillion won ($10.4 billion)
Keen museum visitors have caught first glimpse at some of the 23,000 artworks donated to South Korea from the collection of Samsung's late chairman Lee Kun-hee.
Two exhibitions of the items opened in Seoul on Wednesday, just months after the businessman's family announced the donation as it seeks to settle an inheritance tax bill of over 12 trillion won ($10.4 billion), reports CNN.
The works are showing at the National Museum of Korea and National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (MMCA), the recipients of Lee's vast collection. Items on display include centuries-old antiques and contemporary Korean artworks, while paintings by Western names like Pablo Picasso and Claude Monet are set to be unveiled next year.
Lee, whose father founded technology conglomerate Samsung in the 1930s, died last October aged 78. In April, his family announced that it was expecting to pay more than half the value of his estate in inheritance tax over a period of five years, reports CNN.
That same day, South Korea's Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism revealed that the Lee family was donating approximately 23,000 antiques and artworks to public collections. In a press statement at the time, the ministry said the acquisition would help the two institutions "compete with famous museums abroad."
Neither Lee's relatives nor the museums have disclosed the value of the donation or confirmed how, or even whether, it will figure into the family's inheritance tax commitments.
MMCA received almost 1,500 of the works, in what the museum this week called "the donation of the century." According to senior curator Park Mihwa, the collection of paintings, drawings and sculptures represented the single largest contribution received by the museum "in terms of both value and scale."
"The rare and major artworks of the early 20th century and overseas works have greatly enhanced the quality and quantity of the museum," Park told CNN, describing the acquisition as "an opportunity to expand the horizons of art history research through continuous research."
"We have obtained masterpieces that would have been difficult to purchase with our annual collection budget of 5 billion won ($4.35 million)," she added. "So we expect this collection will help art tourism as well as help South Korea to become a powerhouse of art culture in the future."
Artists 'loved by Koreans'
Among the items acquired by MMCA are 119 works by Western artists, including Paul Gauguin, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Camille Pissarro, Marc Chagall, Salvador Dalí and Joan Miró. But more than 90% of the pieces are by contemporary Korean artists, including over 100 works by painter Lee Jungseop and almost 70 by celebrated craftsman Yoo Kangyul, reports CNN.
The museum's new exhibition features art created from the 1920s to 1970s, spanning the periods of Japanese occupation, the Korean War and the subsequent military dictatorship. Park said the show highlights work "by 34 artists loved by Koreans," including influential landscape artist Byeon Gwansik, abstract painter Kim Whanki and contemporary sculptor Kwon Jinkyu.
At the National Museum of Korea, meanwhile, an exhibition of older artefacts from Lee's collection also opened Wednesday. The show features 45 historical items, including Buddhist statues, rare woodblock prints and Bronze Age earthenware, reports CNN.
The museum is also exhibiting a number of items deemed "National Treasures" by the South Korean government, including an ink wash painting by the Joseon dynasty court artist Jeong Seon and a gilt bronze bodhisattva dating back to the 6th century.
Earlier this month, the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism revealed that it is planning to build a new museum dedicated entirely to Lee's collection, with two candidate sites in Seoul currently under consideration, reports CNN.