Soh Jaipil Lecture Series, State of Grace: The North Korean-Built Angkor Panorama Museum in Light of DPRK-Cambodian Cultural Relations

Adam Bubanich Announcement
Location
District of Columbia, United States
Subject Fields
Architecture and Architectural History, Asian History / Studies, Diplomacy and International Relations, Korean History / Studies, Southeast Asian History / Studies

Relatively little known, and yet readily visible in the form of its conspicuous façade situated along Siem Reap’s present-day tourist trail, the Angkor Panorama Museum stands as a curious component of Angkor Archeological Park. Designed and built by Mansudae Overseas Project, a branch of North Korea’s central art studio, the space opened in December 2015 only to shutter its doors less than four years later in November 2019. On at least one front, the Angkor venture veered from Mansudae Overseas Projects’ representative work, a corpus that has to date consisted largely of socialist monuments commissioned by or gifted to African nations. With the Angkor Panorama Museum, Mansudae, for the first time, engaged with overtly religious subject matter, giving shape to a singular condensation of socialist realism and visual conventions associated with Hinduism and Buddhism.

This talk contextualizes the eccentricities of Mansudae’s Angkor project against the historical background of what amounted to an enduring friendship between Cambodian Prince Norodom Sihanouk (1922–2012) and Kim Il-sung (1912–1994). Exiled for prolonged periods throughout his life, Sihanouk spent substantial intervals at a palace Kim had ordered built for him outside of Pyongyang. There he produced music and poetry eulogizing North Korean–Khmer solidarity, and directed several films in the Korean language that featured all-Korean casts. This array of cultural artifacts anticipated the narrative arc of Mansudae’s Angkor museum by suggesting an unlikely convergence between the respectively secular-communist and religious ideological foundations of the North Korean and Cambodian states—one rooted in a proven resiliency against imperialist aggressors.

Co-sponsors, GW Institute for Korean Studies and the Sigur Center for Asian Studies will host Douglas Gabriel, 2020-21 Korea Foundation Postdoctoral Fellow at GW, and Immanuel Kim (moderator), Korea Foundation and Kim-Renaud Associate professor of Korean Literature and Culture Studies, for this intriguing lecture.

Registered guests will receive a confirmation email with details for joining the Zoom event.

This event is on the record and open to the public.

Contact Email
gsigur@gwu.edu