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Hong Kal

Hong Kal teaches visual art and culture of East Asia. She has written about expositions and museums in relation to the formation of national identity. Her current research focuses on trauma art, socially engaged art, and artistic intervention in urban development in Korea. Her research was supported by Postdoctoral Research Fellowship at Stanford University (2003-2005), Advanced Research Grant from Korea Foundation (2007-2008) and SSHRC Standard Grant (2010-2013). She is the author of Aesthetic Constructions of Korean Nationalism: Spectacle, Politics and History (Routledge, 2011) and published articles in journals of Comparative Studies in Society and History, Inter Asia Cultural Studies, Korean Studies, and The Asia Pacific Journal: Japan Focus. She is currently a core member of Korea in the World, the World in the Korean Studies, the project at York that received the grant ($ 1 million over 5 years, 2018-2022) from the Academy of Korean Studies. Her most recent publication is “The Art of Witnessing: The Sewol Ferry Disaster in Hong Sung-dam’s Paintings,” Korean Studies, 43, 2019, pp. 96-119.


Research Specialties:

Visual Art and Art history (Asian Art History)

Hong Kal

Associate Professor

Department of Visual Art & Art History

hongkal@yorku.ca


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