• January
  • February
  • March
  • April
  • May

    The Second Non Col Exhibition (Korean Information Center, Seoul, May 12–17) is held. A total of seven artists participate including Choi Taeshin, Chung Chanseung, Han Youngsu, Kang Kukjin, Kim Inhwan, Nam Yeonghui, and Yang Cheolmo.

  • June
  • July

    The Korean Craft Design Institute [Hanguk Gongye Design Yeonguso], an incorporated association, is established within the College of Fine Arts at Seoul National University (Jongno-gu, Seoul). The building is designed by Yu Huijun, and Lee Soonsuk serves as the institute’s director. The institute aims to promote exports in the craft industry through research on craft design and production technologies, as well as through the training of technical personnel in the field of crafts.

  • August

    The first issues of the monthly magazines Sajin Yesul (Photo Art) and Photography are published simultaneously. Sajin Yesul is published by Byun Jonggwan. In October 1967, the magazine is renamed Kamera Yesul (Camera Art) and runs for a total of twenty issues. In May 1989, Lee Myeongdong relaunches the magazine under the same title. Photography is published by Hwang Sungok, and in May 1976, it is renamed Wolgan Sajin (Monthly Photography).

    The First Korean Commercial and Industrial Art Exhibition [Daehanminguk sanggong misul jeollamhoe] (Gyeongbokgung Palace Museum, August 3-22) is held, hosted by the Ministry of Commerce and organized by the Korea Chamber of Commerce and Industry. As the first design exhibition in Korea, it features leading figures such as Kwon Soonhyung, Min Chulhong, Paik Taewon, Paik Taiho, Lee Soonsuk, and Han Hongtaik in its establishment. A total of 241 works is exhibited, with 104 works in the Commercial Art section of Part One, 81 works in the Crafts section of Part Two, and fifty-six works in the Industrial Art section of Part Three. The exhibition is renamed the Korea Industrial Design Exhibition in September 1976, and from its forty-second edition in 2007 it is held under the title Korea Design Exhibition.

  • September

    Hosted by Chosun Ilbo newspaper company, The Tenth Contemporary Artists Invitational Exhibition (Gyeongbokgung Palace Museum, Seoul, September 4–13) is held. A total of sixty-nine works by twenty-four artists are exhibited, including Byun Chongha, Chun Sungwoo, Chung Jeumsik, Ha Chonghyun, Kang Yong-un, Kim Youngjoo, Kwon Seungyoung, Lee Soojai, Min Byeongyeong, and Yoo Youngkuk (Western-style painting); Ahn Sangcheol, Chun Kyungja, Kwon Youngwoo, and Park Saengkwang (Eastern-style painting); Choi Kiwon, Chun Sangbum, Kim Younghak, Kwon Jinkyu, and Oh Jong-uk (sculpture); and Bae Yoong, Kim Chonghak, Rhee Seundja, Yoo Kangyul, and Youn Myeungro (printmaking). Ha Chonghyun presents the Naissance series, employing fragments of straw matting, threads, and cut-and-woven canvas on canvas.
     

  • October

    The Fifteenth National Art Exhibition (Gukjeon) (Gyeongbokgung Palace Museum, October 12–November 10), Kang Taisung receives the Presidential Award for Ocean’s Rhythm, and Lee Inyoung receives the Chairman of Congress Award for Afternoon.

  • November

    Kim Swoogeun launches the monthly magazine Gonggan, also known as SPACE. Seeking to be a comprehensive art magazine encompassing art and architecture, with “architecture,” “city,” and “art” as its key principles, the magazine introduces Korean culture to its readers. In its inaugural issue, Park Seo-Bo contributes the essay “Experiential Korean Avant-Garde Art,” which traces the development of contemporary art in the late 1950s and early 1960s. In 1997, the magazine changes its title to the monthly SPACE.

    Han Hongtaik holds his sixth solo exhibition, Han Hongtaik Graphic Art Exhibition (Korean Information Center, Seoul, November 1-7). He presents thirty-three visual design works, including posters, calendars, record covers, and design drafts.

    Kang Bongjin’s design, which followed the guidelines of imitating and incorporating traditional architecture, wins the design competition for the buildings of the General Museum (now the National Folk Museum of Korea). Based on this design, a groundbreaking ceremony is held at Gyeongbokgung Palace. In the following year, architects raise criticisms about the superficial reproduction of traditional styles, prompting broader reflection on the direction of modernization and the continuation of tradition.

    The Korea branch of the Congress for Cultural Freedom (Choon Choo Fine Arts Association) holds The Fifth Cultural Freedom Contemporary Art Exhibition (Center of the Federation of Artistic and Cultural Organization of Korea, Seoul, November 11-20). The art committee includes Kim Chung-up, Oh Jongsik, Yu Kyeunjung, Yu Jun-sang, Lim Young-Bang and the exhibition features five artists: Kim Hyungdae, Chun Sungwoo, Chung Sanghwa, Chung Changsup, Choi Manlin. The exhibition presents eighteen paintings and three sculptures.

  • December

    The Fifth International Biennial Exhibition of Prints in Tokyo (The National Museum of Modern Art, Tokyo, December 4–January 22, 1967) is held. The exhibition features around one thousand artists from forty-three countries. Korean artists Kim Chonghak, Yoo Kangyul, and Youn Myeungro participate, and Kim Chonghak receives an honorable mention for History. The Tokyo International Print Biennale is held from 1957 to 1979, and Korean artists begin participating from the fifth edition.

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