Lee Bul (b. 1964, Yeongju, South Korea) works across performance, sculpture, drawing, painting, installation, architecture, and video. Her work engages themes of utopian and dystopian imagination, technological transformation, modernity’s failures, and the fragility of human ambition, often through cyborg bodies, architectural fragments, and speculative landscapes. She lives and works in Seoul and is widely regarded as one of the most influential artists of her generation.
Born to dissident parents during the military dictatorship of Park Chung-hee, Lee Bul’s childhood was shaped by political repression, underground activism, and frequent relocations, experiences that later informed her critical stance toward power and ideology. After earning a BFA in sculpture from Hongik University in 1987, she became known in the late 1980s and early 1990s for experimental street performances in South Korea and Japan, during which she wore soft, biomorphic sculptures that were described as simultaneously alluring and grotesque. These early works examined censorship, state violence, and gender roles in Korean society, positioning the female body as both vulnerable and resistant.
Significant early works include:
Throughout the 1990s, Lee’s practice continued to probe the human body in relation to beauty, mortality, and technology, often using unstable or perishable materials. A key example is Majestic Splendor (1997), first presented at The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York, which consisted of sequined and beaded fish left to decay in display units; the work was removed early due to the smell, yet subsequently reconfigured for other venues, including the Lyon Biennale. By staging the transformation from seduction to repulsion, Lee exposed the inevitable cycles of life, death, and decay beneath surfaces of ornament and glamour.
Lee Bul’s iconic ‘Cyborg’ (1997–2011) series investigates the desire for the perfect body and the entanglement of the organic and the technological. Works such as Cyborg Red and Cyborg Blue (1997) feature silicone casts of female figures derived from Greco‑Roman statuary, interrupted by mechanical joints and absent limbs, suggesting both empowerment and fragmentation. Frequently read as feminist critiques, these female‑coded cyborgs question social expectations of idealised feminine bodies and the promise of techno‑perfection.
From the mid‑2000s onward, Lee shifted toward model‑like environments and architectural installations that reflect on utopian thinking and its collapse. Her ongoing ‘Mon grand récit’ series (2005–) stages intricate topographies of ruins, small‑scale railways, LED signage, and precarious structures, evoking both modernist dreamscapes and their breakdown. These works crystallised in the expansive exhibition Utopia Saved (2020) at Manege Central Exhibition Hall, St Petersburg, which brought together architectural sculptures, environmental installations, and drawings dealing with utopian desire and historical trauma. As noted in contemporary criticism, the exhibition invited viewers to sense both the textures of utopia and its loss, foregrounding the tension between visionary ambition and its failures. Writing for Ocula Magazine in November 2020, Stephanie Bailey noted that the exhibition ‘is as much about sensing utopia’s textures as it is about feeling its loss’.
Reflective and crystalline materials become central in works such as After Bruno Taut (Devotion to Drift) (2013), a suspended environment of crystal beads, chains, and mirrors inspired by the German architect Bruno Taut and his Glass Pavilion. Lee’s use of reflectivity links early 20th‑century utopian modernism to the memory of militarised South Korea, turning shining surfaces into devices for both projection and critical reflection. In parallel, she has developed painting series such as ‘Perdu’, which combine mother‑of‑pearl with paint to create luminous, fractured surfaces; these works were the focus of her first dedicated painting presentation in Hong Kong, organised by Lehmann Maupin at Hong Kong Spotlight by Art Basel in 2020. The presentation was included in Ocula Magazine‘s ’Hong Kong Spotlight: Six Artists to Watch’.
Genesis Facade Commission:
In 2024, The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York invited Lee Bul to create a major façade commission for its Fifth Avenue building, titled Long Tail Halo, which remained on view until June 2025. The project extended her interest in visionary structures and suspended forms into the public realm, embedding speculative architecture into one of the world’s most visible museum façades.
In 2026, Lee Bul: From 1998 to Now opened at M+, signaling the artist’s first major presentation in Hong Kong and one of the most comprehensive surveys of her career to date, featuring more than 200 works from the late 1990s to 2024 drawn from her studio and collections across Asia and beyond. The M+ presentation grew from a 2025 iteration in Seoul that debuted at Leeum Museum of Art, including an additional group of early works from the late 1980s to early 2000s, as well as recent pieces created in 2024, offering audiences a rare opportunity to trace key developments in her practice.
In addition to the aforementioned survey, Lee Bul has also been the subject of numerous museum shows, including:
Lee Bul has been awarded numerous accolades, including:
Lee Bul (b. 1964, Yeongju, South Korea) is a leading contemporary artist whose interdisciplinary practice spans performance, sculpture, installation, painting, architecture, and media art. She is widely regarded as one of the most influential Asian artists of her generation and lives and works in Seoul.
Lee Bul is best known for her cyborg sculptures and installations, her early performance works critiquing gender and power, and her ambitious architectural and utopian landscapes that explore the rise and fall of modernity.
Lee Bul’s work addresses utopia and dystopia, technological transformation, the relationship between body and machine, the failures of modernist ideals, and the politics of gender, power, and memory. She often reflects on the tension between human aspiration and the fragility or collapse of grand narratives of progress.
M+ in Hong Kong is currently presenting Lee Bul: From 1998 to Now, a major survey of the artist’s work co‑organised with Leeum Museum of Art in Seoul. The exhibition brings together more than 200 works tracing her practice from the late 1990s to recent years, including large‑scale installations, cyborg sculptures, and works on paper and canvas.
Lee Bul’s works often feature unconventional materials like mother-of-pearl, silicone, fiberglass, lacquer, beads, chains, and mirrors.
Lee Bul has received numerous accolades including the Ruth Baumgarte Art Prize (2023), Ho-Am Prize for the Arts (2019), and an honorary doctorate from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (2022).
Ocula | 2026
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