Performance 
Jaha Koo

Postponed: The History of Korean Western Theatre

giant projection red mask green background, Jaha Koo is sitting in it as a small figure
Jaha Koo

is a South Korean theatre and performance artist and composer. His artistic practice oscillates between multimedia and performance, and his works always include his own music, video, text and installation. His performances are closely intertwined with politics, history and personal issues, and zoom in on themes that embody a clash of Eastern and Western culture.

Jaha Koo has been living and working in Belgium for the past few years. The History of Korean Western Theatre is his first production for the Ghent-based, international touring arts centre CAMPO.

gujaha.com

Credits

Concept, text, direction, music, video  
Jaha Koo 
Performance 
Jaha Koo, Seri, Toad 
Dramaturgy 
Dries Douibi 
Scenography, drawing 
Eunkyung Jeong 
Technical team 
Korneel Coessens, Koen Goossens, Anne Meeussen, Philippe Digneffe  
Hardware hacking 
Idella Craddock 
Research 
Eunkyung Jeong, Jaha Koo 
Research assistance 
Sang Ok Kim  
Interview 
Jooyoung Koh, Kiran Kim, Kyungmi Lee 
Production 
CAMPO (Ghent) 
Co-produced by 
Kunstenfestivaldesarts (Brussels), Münchner Kammerspiele, Frascati Producties (Amsterdam), Veem House for Performance (Amsterdam), SPRING performing arts festival (Utrecht), Zürcher Theater Spektakel, Black Box teater (Oslo), Internationales Sommerfestival Festival, Kampnagel (Hamburg), Tanzquartier Wien, wpZimmer (Antwerp), Théâtre de la Bastille (Paris) und Festival d’Automne (Paris) 
Residencies 
Kunstencentrum BUDA (Kortrijk), wpZimmer (Antwerp), Decoratelier Jozef Wouters (Brussels), Doosan Art Center (Seoul) 
With the support of 
Beursschouwburg, Vlaamse Gemeenschapscommissie and Amsterdams Fonds voor de Kunst 
Supported by 

Postponed: The History of Korean Western Theatre

For production reasons, the performance of “The History of Korean Western Theatre” has to be postponed. As a replacement we will show “Lolling and Rolling”, the first part of Jaha Koo's “Hamartia” trilogy.

Click here to see the details for Lolling and Rolling.

Celebrating the centenary of Korean theatre in 2008, the South Korean theatre maker and  composer Jaha Koo realised that there is actually no space for Korean theatre tradition: what is regarded as Korean theatre is largely determined by the Western canon. But why are the South Koreans so proud of this Western interpretation? And why does everyone keep referring to Shakespeare? It raises questions about tradition, self-censorship and authenticity.

In the final piece of his Hamartia trilogy, Jaha Koo resolutely focuses on the future. Meticulously, he exposes the tragic impact of the past on our lives, unveiling the small cracks in modern Confucianism – an ideology that continues to define the moral system, way of life and social relations between generations in South Korea. With a new generation of South Koreans in mind, he attempts to break with a tradition of self-censorship and keeping up appearances. Because only when based on an authentic version of history, he can pass on a future to the next generation.

Like the performances Lolling and Rolling and Cuckoo, which respectively focused on South Korea’s past and present, The History of Korean Western Theatre is an intelligent documentary theatre performance in which Jaha Koo interweaves personal stories with historical, political and sociological facts. Often themes that contain a clash of Eastern and Western culture: from cutting string of tongue to make it in the West, to the heavy personal toll of Western interference on a macroeconomic level.

Watch trailer

This performance should have originally been part of our event series Imagining otherwise – How do we move from here? in November 2020.

Jaha Koo

is a South Korean theatre and performance artist and composer. His artistic practice oscillates between multimedia and performance, and his works always include his own music, video, text and installation. His performances are closely intertwined with politics, history and personal issues, and zoom in on themes that embody a clash of Eastern and Western culture.

Jaha Koo has been living and working in Belgium for the past few years. The History of Korean Western Theatre is his first production for the Ghent-based, international touring arts centre CAMPO.

gujaha.com

Credits

Concept, text, direction, music, video  
Jaha Koo 
Performance 
Jaha Koo, Seri, Toad 
Dramaturgy 
Dries Douibi 
Scenography, drawing 
Eunkyung Jeong 
Technical team 
Korneel Coessens, Koen Goossens, Anne Meeussen, Philippe Digneffe  
Hardware hacking 
Idella Craddock 
Research 
Eunkyung Jeong, Jaha Koo 
Research assistance 
Sang Ok Kim  
Interview 
Jooyoung Koh, Kiran Kim, Kyungmi Lee 
Production 
CAMPO (Ghent) 
Co-produced by 
Kunstenfestivaldesarts (Brussels), Münchner Kammerspiele, Frascati Producties (Amsterdam), Veem House for Performance (Amsterdam), SPRING performing arts festival (Utrecht), Zürcher Theater Spektakel, Black Box teater (Oslo), Internationales Sommerfestival Festival, Kampnagel (Hamburg), Tanzquartier Wien, wpZimmer (Antwerp), Théâtre de la Bastille (Paris) und Festival d’Automne (Paris) 
Residencies 
Kunstencentrum BUDA (Kortrijk), wpZimmer (Antwerp), Decoratelier Jozef Wouters (Brussels), Doosan Art Center (Seoul) 
With the support of 
Beursschouwburg, Vlaamse Gemeenschapscommissie and Amsterdams Fonds voor de Kunst 
Supported by 
18.06./
19.06.
Fri/​Sat
19.30
18.06./
19.06.
Fri/​Sat
19.30
TQW Studios
€ 15/10

Duration: 60 minutes

In Korean with English and German surtitles

 
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