Art on the run at new Incheon terminal | Lifestyle.INQ

OCTOBER 27, 2022

A man walks past a logo of Incheon International Airport at its Terminal 2, west of Seoul, on January 18, 2018. Incheon airport, South Korea's top gateway, on January 18 opened its second terminal, three weeks before the opening of the Pyeongchang Olympics, airport authorities said. Terminal 2 houses four airlines -- South Korea's flag carrier Korean Air, Air France, Delta, and KLM Royal Dutch Airlines. / AFP PHOTO / JUNG Yeon-Je
A man walks past a logo of Incheon International Airport at its Terminal 2, west of Seoul, on January 18, 2018. AFP 

Newly opened second passenger terminal of Incheon International Airport is drawing attention not just for the numbers involved, but also its art.

Under a project called “Artport,” Incheon International Airport has spent more than 18 billion won on displaying artworks throughout the terminal, Ranging from paintings to installations.

The latest 4.6 billion won project is highlighted by five artworks by renowned artists including French sculptor Julius Popp and German media artist Xavier Veilhan. The project was curated and displayed by a consortium led by Daehong Communications, Gana Art and design be:CHE.

The airport wanted to enhance the travel experience of passengers by using artworks at the terminal, the airport’s officials said in explaining the project. The airport even tried to get government accreditation as an art museum, it added.

“Airports are (perhaps) the most optimal places to experience artworks. Airports — which is marked by constants movements — arouse excitement and curiosity in travelers who are on the verge of departure,” Jinnie Seo, whose work “Wings of Vision” is installed at the new terminal, said in a press statement. “Wings of Vision” is an installation piece composed of 19 pavilions ornamented with cloud shapes, that run throughout the gatehouse.

Germany-based media artist Julius Popp also emphasized the significance of the airport’s essence. Popp viewed an airport “a channel that leads people to totally different places and cultures.”

For Popp, airports are places that “(enable passengers) to “encounter and experience things that are different and unfamiliar to them.”

“I want people who visit the airport to see my work as a metaphor for communication and exchange among different cultures,” Popp said in an email interview.

Popp’s work “bit.fall” is an installation art, located at the baggage claims area, features water falling in the shape of letters in nine different languages taken from diverse news sources worldwide.

Meanwhile, the airport also has considered the practical aspect of displaying artworks at the airport’s public space.

With Popp’s work, which uses water as its medium, the airport wanted to create a sense of comfort in the baggage claim area where passengers could feel tired, said Yeom Soo-hyun, general manager at Gana Art.

While hoping that his work will add a “poetic aspect” to passengers’ travel experience with his work “Great Mobiles,” French artist Xavier Veilhan said that the installation art could also serve as a marker for passengers trying to find their way about the terminal.

Other works at the newly opened terminal include Kang Hee-ra’s “Hello,” installation of 1,000 Korean characters, as well as “Ambiguous Wall” by Kim Byung-joo.

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