Windy City Media Group Frontpage News

THE VOICE OF CHICAGO'S GAY, LESBIAN, BI, TRANS AND QUEER COMMUNITY SINCE 1985

home search facebook twitter join
Gay News Sponsor Windy City Times 2023-12-13
DOWNLOAD ISSUE
Donate

Sponsor
Sponsor
Sponsor

  WINDY CITY TIMES

Young Sun of 'Work of Art' on hugs, history and Prop 8
NUNN ON ONE: TV
by Jerry Nunn, Windy City Times
2011-11-09

This article shared 3978 times since Wed Nov 9, 2011
facebook twitter pin it google +1 reddit email


Bravo Channel's Work of Art: The Next Great Artist has openly gay rising artist Young Sun from Illinois as part of the competition. For this second season the artists once again face challenges in groups and solo to win an exhibition at the Brooklyn Museum and $100,000.

The future looks bright for Sun and we brushed up on such topics as Prop 8 and hugging for 24 hours.

Windy City Times: Hello, Young. Tell me a bit about your background.

Young Sun: I am Korean. I was born in Evanston. I went to school in Chicago. I worked for a year abroad in London and in Germany. I worked as a teacher in Korea for a few months. I really got bit by the travel bug as a student.

WCT: It is great to have a hometown person in this one as well. You are from Morton Grove?

YS: I am actually from Skokie, initially. That is where I went to high school and grew up. My parents were living in Morton Grove at the time of filming, which is why the press release says both Morton Grove and Skokie.

WCT: Did you study art in school?

YS: I did. I started taking art classes in high school and even earlier more as a hobby. I went to school at the Art Institute of Chicago for my undergraduate degree.

WCT: What medium do you like to work in?

YS: I focus mainly on photography but more recently on performance art. I also like making things with my hands so sculpture and instillation come into play as well.

WCT: How is it being judged on this show?

YS: It can be very brutal but anyone who has been through art school knows that this is a very standard critique process. You have to constantly defend your work with your peers and professors. I think Jerry Saltz said in his blog that the show is almost like The Next Great Grad Student. It is kind of true in the sense that you are in school again and having your professor like Jerry, Bill and China then you have the other students all talking about the work. They are tearing it apart one week and then praising it the next.

WCT: Isn't it funny how people talk during art events? They get cerebral and talk above people but art can be personal and everyone has an opinion.

YS: Yes. In art school you do so much training about theory and art history with all this complex writing, at times. You get lost in that and feel that you can only defend your work by relating it to other movements in history. It takes time once you have left school to realize that no one really cares about that. You have to talk about it in very human terms and be real. There is a lot of pretentious art speak that happens on the show and in galleries like you say. I think it just takes time for everyday language to talk about it so people understand what you are saying.

WCT: From taking art class in college myself, the teachers in school like to compare artists to other people. Who have you been compared to?

YS: It depends on the project but I did a portrait of a gay couple set very similar to what Catherine Opie did in the '90s. I was reading some message boards and someone said they looked at my website and it reminded them of Ryan Trecartin who made them break out in hives! He does these really frenetic videos and I took it as a compliment. It is always interesting to read what other people say about the work.

WCT: I did see the 24 Hour Embrace project that you did.

YS: That was a really interesting project for me because it was all about human connection. I had found a stranger on Craigslist who agreed to hold me for 24 hours just the midnight on New Year's until midnight of New Years on 2009. That is when I was first coming back to the country to look after my dad and had just broken up with my boyfriend of seven years so it was about these male figures in my life that I was losing contact with in a way. It was also great preparation for this reality show because it required so much endurance. It was good training for Work of Art.

WCT: I noticed on one episode you said you were a curator in New Zealand. How did that happen?

YS: I had taken a lot of art-history courses in college. I have always been interested in what other artists have been doing as well not just my own projects. When I was traveling through New Zealand I was interviewing for jobs and met this woman was just starting a new gallery. She didn't come from an art background but had a really strong business sense. She wanted me to help create a program for her. It was right time and right place. I had been working for galleries for eight years at that time. It was a great opportunity for me.

WCT: You work on a piece about Prop 8 on this next episode also. Someone knocks you down about it in the preview but the topic is still relevant.

YS: It is interesting for me because while I was on the show I was always trying to do these challenges that fulfilled the criteria but knowing it was going to be on television and broadcast to so many people I was hoping to integrate as much artwork to issues that I cared about as possible sometimes with more or less success.

I did the Prop 8 piece because it fit the challenge, which was to do a piece of pop art that is relevant to you and your time. It is an issue that I really care about as well. New York got marriage rights and living in New Zealand domestic partnerships for gay couples was available. It was weird to come back to Chicago and feel like we are really behind the times here. It is a cultural thing as well as a political one.

WCT: Do you want to stay in Illinois?

YS: I've left Illinois so many times but I always end up back here. I have a wanderlust sort of attitude. After two or three years in a place I get restless feet and have to go somewhere else. I think Chicago will always be one of my home bases for sure. The great thing about art is that you can do it anywhere!

Sample Young's website at www.youngsunhan.com . Don't forget to check Bravo's listings at www.bravotv.com with a new episode every Wednesday.


This article shared 3978 times since Wed Nov 9, 2011
facebook twitter pin it google +1 reddit email

Out and Aging
Presented By

  ARTICLES YOU MIGHT LIKE

Gay News

News is Out, Word In Black, Comcast NBCUniversal welcomes 16 Journalism Fellows to cover Black, LGBTQ+ communities
2024-04-16
Philadelphia (April 15, 2024) — Today, News is Out and Word In Black, together announced the 16 fellows selected for The Digital Equity Local Voices Lab, a new initiative powered by Comcast NBCUniversal to place journalists ...


Gay News

SHOWBIZ Jerrod Carmichael, '9-1-1' actor, Kayne the Lovechild, STARZ shows, Cynthia Erivo
2024-04-12
Gay comedian/filmmaker Jerrod Carmichael criticized Dave Chappelle, opening up about the pair's ongoing feud and calling out Chappelle's opinions on the LGBTQ+ community, PinkNews noted, citing an Esquire article. Carmichael ...


Gay News

VIEWPOINT Meditation on the killing of journalists
2024-04-11
Trigger warning: I am a journalist and I read newspapers. I've been reading newspapers since I first learned to read. Newspapers were a lively part of the daily life in my family. I even wrote letters ...


Gay News

Coach/activist Tara VanDerveer retires from Stanford after 38 seasons
2024-04-10
Stanford University women's basketball coach and gender-rights advocate Tara VanDerveer has retired after 38 seasons, media outlets reported. In 45 years as a head coach at Idaho (1978-80), Ohio State ...


Gay News

Lightfoot may be hired to investigate Dolton mayor, trustees
2024-04-06
A group of Dolton trustees is aiming to hire former Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot—who is also an ex-federal prosecutor—to investigate Mayor Tiffany Henyard, media outlets reported. The group wants Lightfoot ...


Gay News

Windy City Times receives two Lisagor nominations
2024-03-30
Chicago Headline Club has announced the finalists for its 2023 Peter Lisagor Awards on March 29. Two Windy City Times journalists were among those finalists. The Peter Lisagor Awards, according to Chicago Headline Club's website, "represent ...


Gay News

Thailand parliament passes landmark marriage bill
2024-03-27
On March 27, Thailand's parliament approved a marriage-equality bill by an overwhelmingly large margin—a landmark step that moves one of Asia's most liberal countries closer to legalizing same-sex unions, media ...


Gay News

Chicago alder proposes renaming street after Obama
2024-03-22
Openly gay Black Chicago Ald. Lamont Robinson has proposed renaming Columbus Drive after former U.S. President and city resident Barack Obama, media outlets noted. The street stretches through the Loop from East Grand Avenue to DuSable ...


Gay News

WORLD Uganda items, HIV report, Mandela, Liechtenstein, foreign minister weds
2024-03-21
It turned out that U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) Senior LGBTQI+ Coordinator Jay Gilliam traveled to Uganda on Feb. 19-27, per The Washington Blade. He visited the capital of Kampala and the nearby city of ...


Gay News

SHOWBIZ Queer musicians, Marvel situation, Elliot Page, Nicole Kidman
2024-03-21
Queer musician Joy Oladokun released the single "I Wished on the Moon," from Jack Antonoff's official soundtrack for the new Apple TV+ series The New Look, per a press release. The soundtrack, ...


Gay News

RuPaul finds 'Hidden Meanings' in new memoir
2024-03-18
RuPaul Andre Charles made a rare Chicago appearance for a book tour on March 12 at The Vic Theatre, 3145 N. Sheffield Ave. Presented by National Public Radio station WBEZ 91.5 FM, the talk coincided with ...


Gay News

Oprah, Niecy Nash-Betts honored at GLAAD Media Awards
2024-03-15
Oprah Winfrey and Niecy Nash-Betts were honored at the 35th Annual GLAAD Media Awards that took place in Los Angeles at The Beverly Hilton on March 14. Winfrey received the Vanguard Award, introduced by iconic Chicago ...


Gay News

UPDATE: Nex Benedict's death ruled a suicide; family responds
2024-03-13
A medical examiner's report concluded that the cause of death of Oklahoma student Nex Benedict (he/they) was suicide, media reports confirmed. Benedict—a 16-year-old transgender student—died Feb. 8, a day after ...


Gay News

House-music festival on Aug. 30-Sept. 1; icons, Idris Elba to be part of it
2024-03-13
The ARC Music Festival—an event celebrating house music—will take place Aug. 30-Sept. 1 at Chicago's Union Park, per WGN-TV. This will mark the fourth year that the festival will celebrate the genre at Union Park—less than ...


Gay News

SHOWBIZ Jinkx Monsoon, Xavier Dolan, 'Frida,' Lena Waithe, out singer
2024-03-08
Two-time RuPaul's Drag Race winner Jinkx Monsoon is headed back to the New York stage, joining off-Broadway's Little Shop of Horrors as Audrey beginning April 2, according to Playbill. The casting makes Monsoon the first drag ...


 


Copyright © 2024 Windy City Media Group. All rights reserved.
Reprint by permission only. PDFs for back issues are downloadable from
our online archives.

Return postage must accompany all manuscripts, drawings, and
photographs submitted if they are to be returned, and no
responsibility may be assumed for unsolicited materials.

All rights to letters, art and photos sent to Nightspots
(Chicago GLBT Nightlife News) and Windy City Times (a Chicago
Gay and Lesbian News and Feature Publication) will be treated
as unconditionally assigned for publication purposes and as such,
subject to editing and comment. The opinions expressed by the
columnists, cartoonists, letter writers, and commentators are
their own and do not necessarily reflect the position of Nightspots
(Chicago GLBT Nightlife News) and Windy City Times (a Chicago Gay,
Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender News and Feature Publication).

The appearance of a name, image or photo of a person or group in
Nightspots (Chicago GLBT Nightlife News) and Windy City Times
(a Chicago Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgender News and Feature
Publication) does not indicate the sexual orientation of such
individuals or groups. While we encourage readers to support the
advertisers who make this newspaper possible, Nightspots (Chicago
GLBT Nightlife News) and Windy City Times (a Chicago Gay, Lesbian
News and Feature Publication) cannot accept responsibility for
any advertising claims or promotions.

 
 

TRENDINGBREAKINGPHOTOS







Sponsor
Sponsor


 



Donate


About WCMG      Contact Us      Online Front  Page      Windy City  Times      Nightspots
Identity      BLACKlines      En La Vida      Archives      Advanced Search     
Windy City Queercast      Queercast Archives     
Press  Releases      Join WCMG  Email List      Email Blast      Blogs     
Upcoming Events      Todays Events      Ongoing Events      Bar Guide      Community Groups      In Memoriam     
Privacy Policy     

Windy City Media Group publishes Windy City Times,
The Bi-Weekly Voice of the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Trans Community.
5315 N. Clark St. #192, Chicago, IL 60640-2113 • PH (773) 871-7610 • FAX (773) 871-7609.