Mire Lee’s (b. 1988) works defy categorization, yet they are idiosyncratic, exuding energy that is entropic and full of polarizing, enticing, and nauseating sentiments. Unsightly yet inexplicably sensational, Lee’s work challenges notions of selfhood, social acceptability, and cleanliness, obliterating societal conventions of aesthetics and desire in the face of her orgasmic, transgressive, and kinetic technologies. Towels, chains, clay, silicon hoses, and steel structures coalesce to form an organism that is haptic, primordial, and yet highly mechanized. In works like Carriers, tentacular appendages amidst a milky rain of glycerin activate a sense of deeply personal indiscretion within the viewer, their projections of vorarephilia functioning as an emblem of solidarity with the increasingly suffocating realities of the Anthropocene, consequences of a carnal, insatiable desire for power. Her sculptural vocabulary, between the realms of machinery and viscera, inhabits an ambiguous, eclectic environment, free of inhibitions yet entirely cognizant of the unspoken boundaries at play.
Mire Lee lives and works between Seoul, South Korea, and Amsterdam, Netherlands. She holds a Bachelor of Arts from the Department of Sculpture (2012) and in Media Arts (2013) from Seoul National University. Her recent solo exhibitions include Mire Lee: Open Wound (2024) the Hyundai Turbine Hall Commission at Tate Modern, London; Black Sun (2023) at the New Museum, New York; Look, I’m a fountain of filth raving mad with love (2022) at ZOLLAMTMMK, MMK Frankfurt; HR Giger & Mire Lee (2021-2022) at Schinkel Pavillon, Berlin; Carriers (2020) at Art Sonje Center, Seoul, amongst others.
Lee’s work was also featured in several group exhibitions, including presentations at MMCA, Seoul (2024), High Line Art, New York (2024), Busan Biennale, Busan (2022), 59th Venice Biennale, Venice (2022), and the 58th Carnegie International, Pittsburgh (2022). She took part in residencies at the Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten, Amsterdam (2018); Seoul Museum of Art (SeMA Nanji Residency) (2017), Cité internationale des arts, Paris (2015), and was recipient of a Special Prize at the 2021 Future Generation Art Prize.
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The 2022 Venice Biennale Finds Hope at the End of the World
Artsy April 21, 2022Within the exhibition, technology reminds viewers of the intensities of our bodies and the vulnerabilities of our flesh. Mire Lee ’s deeply unnerving kinetic sculpture...Learn More -
Mire Lee | 3 Artists to Watch at the 2022 Venice Biennale
L'OFFICIEL ART April 20, 2022Mire Lee’s sculptural installations are often unsightly and heavily material, most often reminiscent of intestines or dissected body parts that exude liquids that allude to...Learn More -
Mire Lee | The Milk of Dreams |Tour Cecilia Alemani’s Venice Biennale Exhibition, Coursing with Surrealist Energies and Abounding with Bodies
Artnews April 20, 2022Mire Lee Remember this name: the Korean artist Mire Lee, who works in Amsterdam, is displaying kinetic sculptures that suggest organs being tortured in a...Learn More -
Mire Lee | The Best Art in the 2022 Venice Biennale’s Main Show
Artnews April 20, 2022Mire Lee This is a Biennale where kink proliferates, from a Mariann Simnett installation involving S&M to a Zheng Bo video in which dancers attempt...Learn More -
Mire Lee
Artforum December 3, 2021THE ARTISTS’ ARTISTS Twenty-three artists reflect on 2021 To take stock of the past year, Artforum asked an international group of artists to select a...Learn More -
MIRE LEE ON SCULPTING BODY HORROR AND VORE
Art in America November 12, 2021Mire Lee’s silicone sculptures resemble life forms that defy easy classification. These works, which look a bit like innards, are often equipped with hidden motors...Learn More -
HR Giger & Mire Lee
e-flux September 16, 2021The Schinkel Pavillon brings together the worlds of the late Swiss visionary HR Giger (1940–2014) and the South Korean artist Mire Lee (b. 1988), transforming...Learn More -
Vorarephilia: Mire Lee
Mousse Magazine July 20, 2021ESSAYS Mousse 69 Vorarephilia: Mire Lee by Alvin Li I first encountered Korean artist Mire Lee via an Instagram story—a documentation of Andrea, Ophelia, at...Learn More -
Mire Lee
CURA.36 July 20, 2021Mire Lee’s promethean sculptures and installations instill a creeping transgressive horror. Twisted piles of rubber tubing, pools of silicate, and ventricular pumps gurn, and ejaculate....Learn More -
Mire Lee: Carriers
E-flux July 23, 2020Mire Lee: Carriers In her sculpture and installation work, Mire Lee uses machinery that operates by simple principles, along with materials that can be felt...Learn More