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Nikki S. Lee

Lee Seung-hee (Korean이승희; born 1970),[2] known professionally as Nikki S. Lee, is a South Korean visual artist with a focus on performance, photography, and film.[3] Lee often explores themes of identity through her work — specifically as it relates to others, rather than individual identity.[4] Her photography series Projects (1997–2001) is her first and most notable work, where she camouflages herself as a member of the social and ethnic groups she poses with.[5] Lee now lives and works in Seoul, South Korea.[6][5]

Nikki S. Lee
On the March 2007 cover of KoreAm
Born
Lee Seung-hee

1970 (age 53–54)
Citizenship
  • United States
Alma mater
Occupation
  • Photographer
Spouse
(m. 2007)
AwardsThe Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Award
2001 The Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation
Korean name
Hangul
이승희[1]
Revised RomanizationI Seunghui
McCune–ReischauerI Sŭnghŭi

Early life and education edit

Lee was born in Geochang (거창군), South Korea.[7] During her childhood, Lee was exposed to a variety of foreign cultures through American media.[8] She developed an interest in learning about various cultures and their people. However, because she knew it was difficult for a woman artist to gain recognition––and because she didn't think it was particularly "cool"––she was hesitant to pursue a career in art. Lee wanted to pursue an acting career instead, but decided not to due to insecurities about her physical appearance. She also wanted to be a filmmaker but her parents didn't want her to attend cinema school. Lee thought she might get around that by going to school for photography, which her parents did accept.[9]

Lee earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts in photography at Chung-Ang University (중앙대학교) in South Korea in 1993. After a year, she moved to New York City to study commercial photography at the Fashion Institute of Technology. Lee completed this program in 1996, receiving an Associate in Applied Science. She subsequently earned her Master of Arts in photography at New York University (NYU) in 1999.[10][11] During her first year at NYU, she nearly quit because it was so technical and documentary focused. She disliked that she had to go out to the streets and take photographs because she did not like "bothering people". In the years after, however, she became interested in the conceptual aspect of photography.[9]

Lee chose her "American" name, 'Nikki' after she moved to America in 1994. She asked a friend of hers to compile a list of American sounding names for her to choose from. It was not until much later that Lee found out that her friend had made the list from that month's edition of Vogue, and that "Nikki", came from the model Niki Taylor.[12]

Work edit

In Lee's early career, she started as a photo assistant for the LaChapelle Studio. She carried lighting, helped set up the studio, and loaded film as an intern. Although she enjoyed working for commercial photography, she was drawn to make "something of [her] own", as she had desired when she was a child. She quit her job in the fashion world and began to focus on her own work.[9]

Projects, 1997–2001 edit

Lee's most noted series of work, Projects (1997–2001), began as a graduation requirement.[12] Photographs were of herself with twelve groups of people, as published in the photobook with the same title: Projects. They were titled according to the subculture she transformed herself to appear as: The Punk Project (1997), The Tourist Project (1997), The Young Japanese (East Village) Project (1997), The Lesbian Project (1997), The Hispanic Project (1998), The Yuppie Project (1998), The Swingers Project (1998–99), The Seniors Project (1999), The Ohio Project (1999), The Exotic Dancers Project (2000), The Skateboarders Project (2000), and The Schoolgirls Project (2000).[9] Additional projects not included in this publication were The Drag Queen Project (1997),[13] and The Hip-Hop Project (2001).[14]

In preparation for each project, Lee would select a subculture, research it, and adopt the clothing, customs, and mannerisms of the group to fully integrate herself. She would try out many types of makeup, hairstyles, and multicolored contact lenses. Then, she either got her clothes from various thrift stores or places that people of the subculture she wanted to pose as frequented.[9] For The Seniors Project, where Lee had to appear as an older woman, she had to get her makeup done professionally instead of doing the look herself––as she had done with all her other projects. Some projects required a specific skill: for The Skateboarders Project Lee had to learn how to skateboard, and for The Exotic Dancers Project she dieted and trained for three months with a personal trainer.[15] After three or more months of developing the identity, Lee would ask a person to take a picture of her with the group.[8]

The use of an automatic camera for all of the photographs in Projects provided Lee with a red timestamp, which captured the moment when the picture was taken.[16] As Lee herself was in the photos, she had her friends take them.[15] She has said that the use of this type of camera made people around her more comfortable because they were used to seeing and/or using it.[12] Though it was a lower quality camera, that did not really matter to Lee; she was more focused on investigating notions of identity and the uses of vernacular photography, instead of creating beautiful pictures.[17]

The use of snapshot photography, which refers to a "shot" taken very spontaneously, helped her truly become one with the group to the perspective of the audience. Especially as Lee believed that individual personalities are fluid and that her exploration of other identities were simply extensions of themselves, this unprepared nature of photography perfectly encapsulated how each and every group was simply her own reality.[18]

Lee was open with her intentions as an artist, that she was an artist, as she went through this process, but not all of them believed her.[19] Some of the seniors depicted in The Senior Project did not believe that Lee was actually a young woman under her old lady disguise.[9]

While Lee's projects appear completely unique from one another, there is a common thread among all of the subcultures she portrays. One such is that each of the groups she chose to create an identity has a distinctive look that functions as a connection between the members of their community. Lee's projects highlight her underlying concept of how other people make her a certain kind of person and the influence of inner relationships on the idea of identity.[20]

Since the 1990s, Lee has spoken often about her motivations behind her work. She has emphasized the importance of group identity and social performance in Asia, as opposed to the more personal sense of identity in the US. In an interview with curator RoseLee Goldberg published in 2006, she stated: "Western culture is very much about the individual, while Eastern culture is more about identity in the context of society. You simply cannot think of yourself out of context."[5]

Due to the cultural stereotypes that her transformations utilize, Lee's work in Projects has received criticism of cultural appropriation and blackface.[5][21] Furthermore, critics have argued that her style of interpretive authorship is rather a representation of authoritarian power over the identity of other subcultures.[22]

Parts, 2002-2005 edit

Lee began her Parts (2002–5) series during the fall of 2002, in London. The inspiration behind it emerged from thoughts she had as she was working on her Projects series. Her various identities in those projects drew out men of equal variety and it made her think about the way identity changes within romantic relationships. For Parts, Lee created stories around each of the heterosexual couples she depicted.[23]

In each photograph, Lee plays the role of the woman, posing in different settings with a man––a romantic partner. However, every image is cropped to make it impossible to directly see who she is with, leaving only a trace of the man, such as an arm or a foot.[17][24] This cropping directs the viewer's focus to the woman but evokes curiosity about the partner.[10]

When asked about the cropping, Lee said that it was not supposed to be reminiscent of a break-up; how one might cut their ex out of every photo of them together. Instead, the cropping was an aesthetic, and it was meant to make the viewer curious about the part which was missing and how the parts missing alter the person who is still pictured.[4]

One of the series included in Parts, called The Wedding Series was commissioned by The Jewish Museum. The work was part of one of the museum's exhibitions titled The Jewish Identity Project: New American Photography.[23] It was open from September 23, 2005 to January 29, 2006.[25]

a.k.a. Nikki S. Lee (2006) edit

In 2006, Lee released the film, A.K.A. Nikki S. Lee. The project, described as a "conceptual documentary", alternates segments presenting Lee as two distinct personalities, one a reserved academic and another an outgoing socialite. It had its premiere at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, October 5–7, 2006.[8] The film appears to be a true Nikki documentary, a young woman who is serious about making a second documentary about herself. Nikki No. 2, an impulsive personality, flaunts in the photo. Lee explained in an interview, "Nikki number one should be Nikki, and Nikki number two should be fake. But both are Nikki fake."[20]

Through this work, she aims to point out the interesting concept of showing reality and non-reality at the same time, what is acting and what is not. Lee decided on making a documentary, or a fake documentary, because she felt that it was the best medium to convey the concepts and common themes of her work.[15]

Layers (2008) edit

One of her most recent works is Layers (2008), which is a series of photographs that show layers of the portraits she collected from 14 different cities, across various parts of the world.[15] Lee provided tracing paper to each of the street artists she asked to draw her portrait,[10] so that she would be able to later layer them together on top of a light box. She only layered three sketches at a time––three from each city she visited––put them together with the lightbox and took a picture of the resulting mix.[8] The purpose of this project was to find out how people from different cities and of different ethnicities would perceive Lee and her features. With this project, Lee asserts that everyone has complex, multilayered personalities, in which any small parts can be viewed by others of different ethnicities.[15]

Other Work edit

During her career, Lee's only work for commercial magazines was with BlackBook and The New York Times Magazine.[23] Lee collaborated with BlackBook on the theme of bourgeois, creating photographs of herself and her companion as a bourgeois couple.[4] This series was titled The Bourgeoisie and was later published, along with Paris––a series where various couples are depicted in Paris, with Lee as the focus––from Lee's Parts series.[23]

Personal life edit

In 2007, Lee married actor Teo Yoo.[26][27]

Awards edit

Collections edit

Lee's work is held in the following permanent collections:[29][30]

References edit

  1. ^ Yi Nam-hui (July 2011), "뉴욕이 주목한 아티스트 니키 리 [Noted New York artist Nikki Lee]", The Dong-A Ilbo, no. 622, pp. 310–315, retrieved 2011-09-29
  2. ^ "Nikki S. Lee | Artist Profile". NMWA. Retrieved 2023-04-08.
  3. ^ Allison, Amanda (2009). "Identity in Flux: Exploring the Work of Nikki S. Lee". Art Education. 62 (1): 25–30. doi:10.1080/00043125.2009.11519001. ISSN 0004-3125. S2CID 194976015.
  4. ^ a b c Waltener, Shane (2004). "The Real Nikki". Modern Painters. 17 (1): 67–69.
  5. ^ a b c d Vogel, Wendy (2020-03-26). "Twenty Years On, Nikki S. Lee's Shapeshifting Art Provokes Debates About Cultural Appropriation". ARTnews.com. Retrieved 2023-04-08.
  6. ^ "Nikki S. Lee". www.artnet.com. Retrieved 2023-04-08.
  7. ^ "[인물 포커스]니키 리 "정체성에 대한 물음표가 작품 화두"". The Dong-a Ilbo (in Korean). 2004-11-02. Retrieved 2023-05-05.
  8. ^ a b c d Lee, Phil (2008). "Indefinite "Nikkis" in a World of Hyperreality: An Interview with Nikki S. Lee". Chicago Art Journal. 18: 76–93.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Lee, Nikki S. (2001). Projects. Russell Ferguson, Gilbert Vicario, Lesley A. Martin. Ostfildern-Ruit, Germany. ISBN 3-7757-1091-4. OCLC 48209778.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  10. ^ a b c Jana, Reena (23 February 2011). "Lee, Nikki S.". Oxford Art Online. doi:10.1093/gao/9781884446054.article.T2090440. ISBN 978-1-884446-05-4. {{cite book}}: |website= ignored (help)
  11. ^ "Nikki S. Lee". International Center of Photography. 2016-03-02. Retrieved 2023-04-08.
  12. ^ a b c Higgins, Jackie; Kozloff, Max (2014). "Nikki S. Lee". The World Atlas of Street Photography. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. pp. 42–45. ISBN 978-0300214543.
  13. ^ "Sold at Auction: Nikki S. Lee, First Photo from The Drag Queen Project by Nikki Lee". Invaluable. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  14. ^ Lee, Nikki S., The Hip Hop Project (36), retrieved 2023-05-09
  15. ^ a b c d e Photographer Nikki S. Lee Can Turn Into Anyone, retrieved 2023-05-08
  16. ^ Lee, Hyun Joo (2019). "A Passage to the Undercommons: Virtual Formation of Identity in Nikki S. Lee's Self-Transformative Performance". Cultural Critique. 104 (1): 72–100. doi:10.1353/cul.2019.0035. ISSN 1460-2458. S2CID 202249532.
  17. ^ a b "Fluid Identities: The "Parts" and "Projects" of Nikki Lee". Broad Strokes: The National Museum of Women in the Arts' Blog. 1 November 2013.
  18. ^ "Nikki S. LEE 이승희". The Guggenheim Museums and Foundation. Retrieved 2024-03-29.
  19. ^ "Collections – MoCP". collections.mocp.org. Retrieved 2023-04-09.
  20. ^ a b University of Michigan (19 August 2009), Nikki S. Lee - Parts and Projects – via YouTube
  21. ^ Kim, Eunsong (2016-05-30). "Nikki S. Lee's "Projects"—And the Ongoing Circulation of Blackface, Brownface in "Art"". contemptorary. Retrieved 2021-08-05.
  22. ^ Coles, Alex (2000). Site-specificity: the ethnographic turn. London, UK: Black Dog. pp. 74–91.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  23. ^ a b c d Lee, Nikki S.; Goldberg, Roselee (2005). Parts. Hatje Cantz Verlag. ISBN 9783775716727.
  24. ^ Miller, J. Macneill (September 2007), "The Impersonal Album: Chronicling Life in the Digital Age.", Afterimage, 35 (2): 9–12
  25. ^ "The Jewish Identity Project: New American Photography". The Jewish Museum. Retrieved 2023-05-09.
  26. ^ "Yoo Teo Says His Dream Is to Become a World-Famous Actor". ZAPZEE. 2021-02-04. Retrieved 2021-08-05.
  27. ^ Lim, Ashley. "The Project Series: A Profile on Artist Nikki Lee". The Science Survey. Retrieved 2021-08-05.
  28. ^ "2001". The Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation. Retrieved 2023-04-10.
  29. ^ "Nikki S. Lee". www.sikkemajenkinsco.com. Retrieved 2020-06-04.
  30. ^ "Nikki S. Lee | artnet". www.artnet.com. Retrieved 2020-06-04.
  31. ^ "The Hispanic Project (#1)". www.moca.org. Retrieved 2021-03-12.
  32. ^ "Museum of Contemporary Photography". www.mocp.org. Retrieved 2020-06-04.
  33. ^ "Nikki S. Lee". International Center of Photography. 2 March 2016. Retrieved 2020-06-26.
  34. ^ "The Guggenheim Museums and Foundation". The Guggenheim Museums and Foundation. Retrieved 2023-04-10.
  35. ^ "Results - the query [Artist:Nikki S. Lee] | COLLECTION SEARCH | FUKUOKA ASIAN ART MUSEUM". FUKUOKA ASIAN ART MUSEUM - COLLECTION SEARCH. Retrieved 2020-06-04.
  36. ^ "Nikki S. Lee | Artist Profile". NMWA. Retrieved 2021-03-12.
  37. ^ "The Hispanic Project (2)". Indianapolis Museum of Art Online Collection. Retrieved 2021-03-12.
  38. ^ "The Hispanic Project (20)". Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art. 2015-03-12. Retrieved 2021-03-12.
  39. ^ "Exchange: Paris #206". exchange.umma.umich.edu. Retrieved 2021-03-12.
  40. ^ Harvard. "From the Harvard Art Museums' collections The Hip Hop Project (32)". harvardartmuseums.org. Retrieved 2021-03-12.
  41. ^ "The Yuppie Project".
  42. ^ "The Ohio Project (8)". www.metmuseum.org. Retrieved 2021-03-12.
  43. ^ "The Skateboarders Project (14)". SFMOMA. Retrieved 2021-03-12.
  44. ^ "The Hispanic Project (1) (2010-207)". artmuseum.princeton.edu. Retrieved 2021-03-12.

General references edit

  • Coles, Alex (2000). Site-Specificity: The Ethnographic Turn. London: Black Dog Publishing. pp. 74–91.

External links edit

  • Leslie Tonkonow Artworks + Projects, New York
  • Now in Moving Pictures: The Multitudes of Nikki S. Lee by Carol Kino in The New York Times
  • Cultural Karaoke by Ben Davis, Artnet Magazine

nikki, other, people, named, nikki, nikki, disambiguation, seung, korean, 이승희, born, 1970, known, professionally, south, korean, visual, artist, with, focus, performance, photography, film, often, explores, themes, identity, through, work, specifically, relate. For other people named Nikki Lee see Nikki Lee disambiguation Lee Seung hee Korean 이승희 born 1970 2 known professionally as Nikki S Lee is a South Korean visual artist with a focus on performance photography and film 3 Lee often explores themes of identity through her work specifically as it relates to others rather than individual identity 4 Her photography series Projects 1997 2001 is her first and most notable work where she camouflages herself as a member of the social and ethnic groups she poses with 5 Lee now lives and works in Seoul South Korea 6 5 Nikki S LeeOn the March 2007 cover of KoreAmBornLee Seung hee1970 age 53 54 Geochang County South Gyeongsang Province South KoreaCitizenshipUnited StatesAlma materChung Ang University BFA Fashion Institute of TechnologyNew York University MA OccupationPhotographerSpouseTeo Yoo m 2007 wbr AwardsThe Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Award 2001 The Louis Comfort Tiffany FoundationKorean nameHangul이승희 1 Revised RomanizationI SeunghuiMcCune ReischauerI Sŭnghŭi Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Work 2 1 Projects 1997 2001 2 2 Parts 2002 2005 2 3 a k a Nikki S Lee 2006 2 4 Layers 2008 2 5 Other Work 3 Personal life 4 Awards 5 Collections 6 References 7 General references 8 External linksEarly life and education editLee was born in Geochang 거창군 South Korea 7 During her childhood Lee was exposed to a variety of foreign cultures through American media 8 She developed an interest in learning about various cultures and their people However because she knew it was difficult for a woman artist to gain recognition and because she didn t think it was particularly cool she was hesitant to pursue a career in art Lee wanted to pursue an acting career instead but decided not to due to insecurities about her physical appearance She also wanted to be a filmmaker but her parents didn t want her to attend cinema school Lee thought she might get around that by going to school for photography which her parents did accept 9 Lee earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts in photography at Chung Ang University 중앙대학교 in South Korea in 1993 After a year she moved to New York City to study commercial photography at the Fashion Institute of Technology Lee completed this program in 1996 receiving an Associate in Applied Science She subsequently earned her Master of Arts in photography at New York University NYU in 1999 10 11 During her first year at NYU she nearly quit because it was so technical and documentary focused She disliked that she had to go out to the streets and take photographs because she did not like bothering people In the years after however she became interested in the conceptual aspect of photography 9 Lee chose her American name Nikki after she moved to America in 1994 She asked a friend of hers to compile a list of American sounding names for her to choose from It was not until much later that Lee found out that her friend had made the list from that month s edition of Vogue and that Nikki came from the model Niki Taylor 12 Work editIn Lee s early career she started as a photo assistant for the LaChapelle Studio She carried lighting helped set up the studio and loaded film as an intern Although she enjoyed working for commercial photography she was drawn to make something of her own as she had desired when she was a child She quit her job in the fashion world and began to focus on her own work 9 Projects 1997 2001 edit Lee s most noted series of work Projects 1997 2001 began as a graduation requirement 12 Photographs were of herself with twelve groups of people as published in the photobook with the same title Projects They were titled according to the subculture she transformed herself to appear as The Punk Project 1997 The Tourist Project 1997 The Young Japanese East Village Project 1997 The Lesbian Project 1997 The Hispanic Project 1998 The Yuppie Project 1998 The Swingers Project 1998 99 The Seniors Project 1999 The Ohio Project 1999 The Exotic Dancers Project 2000 The Skateboarders Project 2000 and The Schoolgirls Project 2000 9 Additional projects not included in this publication were The Drag Queen Project 1997 13 and The Hip Hop Project 2001 14 In preparation for each project Lee would select a subculture research it and adopt the clothing customs and mannerisms of the group to fully integrate herself She would try out many types of makeup hairstyles and multicolored contact lenses Then she either got her clothes from various thrift stores or places that people of the subculture she wanted to pose as frequented 9 For The Seniors Project where Lee had to appear as an older woman she had to get her makeup done professionally instead of doing the look herself as she had done with all her other projects Some projects required a specific skill for The Skateboarders Project Lee had to learn how to skateboard and for The Exotic Dancers Project she dieted and trained for three months with a personal trainer 15 After three or more months of developing the identity Lee would ask a person to take a picture of her with the group 8 The use of an automatic camera for all of the photographs in Projects provided Lee with a red timestamp which captured the moment when the picture was taken 16 As Lee herself was in the photos she had her friends take them 15 She has said that the use of this type of camera made people around her more comfortable because they were used to seeing and or using it 12 Though it was a lower quality camera that did not really matter to Lee she was more focused on investigating notions of identity and the uses of vernacular photography instead of creating beautiful pictures 17 The use of snapshot photography which refers to a shot taken very spontaneously helped her truly become one with the group to the perspective of the audience Especially as Lee believed that individual personalities are fluid and that her exploration of other identities were simply extensions of themselves this unprepared nature of photography perfectly encapsulated how each and every group was simply her own reality 18 Lee was open with her intentions as an artist that she was an artist as she went through this process but not all of them believed her 19 Some of the seniors depicted in The Senior Project did not believe that Lee was actually a young woman under her old lady disguise 9 While Lee s projects appear completely unique from one another there is a common thread among all of the subcultures she portrays One such is that each of the groups she chose to create an identity has a distinctive look that functions as a connection between the members of their community Lee s projects highlight her underlying concept of how other people make her a certain kind of person and the influence of inner relationships on the idea of identity 20 Since the 1990s Lee has spoken often about her motivations behind her work She has emphasized the importance of group identity and social performance in Asia as opposed to the more personal sense of identity in the US In an interview with curator RoseLee Goldberg published in 2006 she stated Western culture is very much about the individual while Eastern culture is more about identity in the context of society You simply cannot think of yourself out of context 5 Due to the cultural stereotypes that her transformations utilize Lee s work in Projects has received criticism of cultural appropriation and blackface 5 21 Furthermore critics have argued that her style of interpretive authorship is rather a representation of authoritarian power over the identity of other subcultures 22 Parts 2002 2005 edit Lee began her Parts 2002 5 series during the fall of 2002 in London The inspiration behind it emerged from thoughts she had as she was working on her Projects series Her various identities in those projects drew out men of equal variety and it made her think about the way identity changes within romantic relationships For Parts Lee created stories around each of the heterosexual couples she depicted 23 In each photograph Lee plays the role of the woman posing in different settings with a man a romantic partner However every image is cropped to make it impossible to directly see who she is with leaving only a trace of the man such as an arm or a foot 17 24 This cropping directs the viewer s focus to the woman but evokes curiosity about the partner 10 When asked about the cropping Lee said that it was not supposed to be reminiscent of a break up how one might cut their ex out of every photo of them together Instead the cropping was an aesthetic and it was meant to make the viewer curious about the part which was missing and how the parts missing alter the person who is still pictured 4 One of the series included in Parts called The Wedding Series was commissioned by The Jewish Museum The work was part of one of the museum s exhibitions titled The Jewish Identity Project New American Photography 23 It was open from September 23 2005 to January 29 2006 25 a k a Nikki S Lee 2006 edit In 2006 Lee released the film A K A Nikki S Lee The project described as a conceptual documentary alternates segments presenting Lee as two distinct personalities one a reserved academic and another an outgoing socialite It had its premiere at the Museum of Modern Art in New York October 5 7 2006 8 The film appears to be a true Nikki documentary a young woman who is serious about making a second documentary about herself Nikki No 2 an impulsive personality flaunts in the photo Lee explained in an interview Nikki number one should be Nikki and Nikki number two should be fake But both are Nikki fake 20 Through this work she aims to point out the interesting concept of showing reality and non reality at the same time what is acting and what is not Lee decided on making a documentary or a fake documentary because she felt that it was the best medium to convey the concepts and common themes of her work 15 Layers 2008 edit One of her most recent works is Layers 2008 which is a series of photographs that show layers of the portraits she collected from 14 different cities across various parts of the world 15 Lee provided tracing paper to each of the street artists she asked to draw her portrait 10 so that she would be able to later layer them together on top of a light box She only layered three sketches at a time three from each city she visited put them together with the lightbox and took a picture of the resulting mix 8 The purpose of this project was to find out how people from different cities and of different ethnicities would perceive Lee and her features With this project Lee asserts that everyone has complex multilayered personalities in which any small parts can be viewed by others of different ethnicities 15 Other Work edit During her career Lee s only work for commercial magazines was with BlackBook and The New York Times Magazine 23 Lee collaborated with BlackBook on the theme of bourgeois creating photographs of herself and her companion as a bourgeois couple 4 This series was titled The Bourgeoisie and was later published along with Paris a series where various couples are depicted in Paris with Lee as the focus from Lee s Parts series 23 Personal life editIn 2007 Lee married actor Teo Yoo 26 27 Awards edit2001 The Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Award from The Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation 28 Collections editLee s work is held in the following permanent collections 29 30 Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles 31 Museum of Contemporary Photography Chicago 32 Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden Washington D C International Center of Photography New York 33 Solomon R Guggenheim Museum New York 5 prints as of 10 April 2023 34 Fukuoka Asian Art Museum Japan 35 National Museum of Women in the Arts Washington D C 36 Indianapolis Museum of Art Indianapolis 37 Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art Kansas City 38 University of Michigan Museum of Art Ann Arbor 39 Harvard Art Museums Cambridge 40 Museum of Fine Arts Houston 41 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York City 42 San Francisco Museum of Modern Art 43 Princeton University Art Museum Princeton 44 References edit Yi Nam hui July 2011 뉴욕이 주목한 아티스트 니키 리 Noted New York artist Nikki Lee The Dong A Ilbo no 622 pp 310 315 retrieved 2011 09 29 Nikki S Lee Artist Profile NMWA Retrieved 2023 04 08 Allison Amanda 2009 Identity in Flux Exploring the Work of Nikki S Lee Art Education 62 1 25 30 doi 10 1080 00043125 2009 11519001 ISSN 0004 3125 S2CID 194976015 a b c Waltener Shane 2004 The Real Nikki Modern Painters 17 1 67 69 a b c d Vogel Wendy 2020 03 26 Twenty Years On Nikki S Lee s Shapeshifting Art Provokes Debates About Cultural Appropriation ARTnews com Retrieved 2023 04 08 Nikki S Lee www artnet com Retrieved 2023 04 08 인물 포커스 니키 리 정체성에 대한 물음표가 작품 화두 The Dong a Ilbo in Korean 2004 11 02 Retrieved 2023 05 05 a b c d Lee Phil 2008 Indefinite Nikkis in a World of Hyperreality An Interview with Nikki S Lee Chicago Art Journal 18 76 93 a b c d e f Lee Nikki S 2001 Projects Russell Ferguson Gilbert Vicario Lesley A Martin Ostfildern Ruit Germany ISBN 3 7757 1091 4 OCLC 48209778 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b c Jana Reena 23 February 2011 Lee Nikki S Oxford Art Online doi 10 1093 gao 9781884446054 article T2090440 ISBN 978 1 884446 05 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a website ignored help Nikki S Lee International Center of Photography 2016 03 02 Retrieved 2023 04 08 a b c Higgins Jackie Kozloff Max 2014 Nikki S Lee The World Atlas of Street Photography New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press pp 42 45 ISBN 978 0300214543 Sold at Auction Nikki S Lee First Photo from The Drag Queen Project by Nikki Lee Invaluable Retrieved 2023 05 09 Lee Nikki S The Hip Hop Project 36 retrieved 2023 05 09 a b c d e Photographer Nikki S Lee Can Turn Into Anyone retrieved 2023 05 08 Lee Hyun Joo 2019 A Passage to the Undercommons Virtual Formation of Identity in Nikki S Lee s Self Transformative Performance Cultural Critique 104 1 72 100 doi 10 1353 cul 2019 0035 ISSN 1460 2458 S2CID 202249532 a b Fluid Identities The Parts and Projects of Nikki Lee Broad Strokes The National Museum of Women in the Arts Blog 1 November 2013 Nikki S LEE 이승희 The Guggenheim Museums and Foundation Retrieved 2024 03 29 Collections MoCP collections mocp org Retrieved 2023 04 09 a b University of Michigan 19 August 2009 Nikki S Lee Parts and Projects via YouTube Kim Eunsong 2016 05 30 Nikki S Lee s Projects And the Ongoing Circulation of Blackface Brownface in Art contemptorary Retrieved 2021 08 05 Coles Alex 2000 Site specificity the ethnographic turn London UK Black Dog pp 74 91 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link a b c d Lee Nikki S Goldberg Roselee 2005 Parts Hatje Cantz Verlag ISBN 9783775716727 Miller J Macneill September 2007 The Impersonal Album Chronicling Life in the Digital Age Afterimage 35 2 9 12 The Jewish Identity Project New American Photography The Jewish Museum Retrieved 2023 05 09 Yoo Teo Says His Dream Is to Become a World Famous Actor ZAPZEE 2021 02 04 Retrieved 2021 08 05 Lim Ashley The Project Series A Profile on Artist Nikki Lee The Science Survey Retrieved 2021 08 05 2001 The Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Retrieved 2023 04 10 Nikki S Lee www sikkemajenkinsco com Retrieved 2020 06 04 Nikki S Lee artnet www artnet com Retrieved 2020 06 04 The Hispanic Project 1 www moca org Retrieved 2021 03 12 Museum of Contemporary Photography www mocp org Retrieved 2020 06 04 Nikki S Lee International Center of Photography 2 March 2016 Retrieved 2020 06 26 The Guggenheim Museums and Foundation The Guggenheim Museums and Foundation Retrieved 2023 04 10 Results the query Artist Nikki S Lee COLLECTION SEARCH FUKUOKA ASIAN ART MUSEUM FUKUOKA ASIAN ART MUSEUM COLLECTION SEARCH Retrieved 2020 06 04 Nikki S Lee Artist Profile NMWA Retrieved 2021 03 12 The Hispanic Project 2 Indianapolis Museum of Art Online Collection Retrieved 2021 03 12 The Hispanic Project 20 Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art 2015 03 12 Retrieved 2021 03 12 Exchange Paris 206 exchange umma umich edu Retrieved 2021 03 12 Harvard From the Harvard Art Museums collections The Hip Hop Project 32 harvardartmuseums org Retrieved 2021 03 12 The Yuppie Project The Ohio Project 8 www metmuseum org Retrieved 2021 03 12 The Skateboarders Project 14 SFMOMA Retrieved 2021 03 12 The Hispanic Project 1 2010 207 artmuseum princeton edu Retrieved 2021 03 12 General references editColes Alex 2000 Site Specificity The Ethnographic Turn London Black Dog Publishing pp 74 91 External links editLeslie Tonkonow Artworks Projects New York Now in Moving Pictures The Multitudes of Nikki S Lee by Carol Kino in The New York Times Cultural Karaoke by Ben Davis Artnet Magazine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nikki S Lee amp oldid 1220298768, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, 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