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He tells of being shocked in 2003 when he saw a woman in a college class wearing ripped blue jeans, something he had been told by North Korean propaganda was an example of the South's extreme poverty. The next day, he approached the woman and gave her a needle and thread to mend her pants, not knowing they were an intentional fashion statement. Although he used to regard his work for Kim Jong Il's propaganda machine as an "infinite honor," meant to glorify the man he was taught to revere, he now refuses to label his propaganda posters as art. He merely reproduced pictures he was ordered to work on. "People in the paintings had to seem happy. If not, they would not be published publicly," Song said. In the North, he was always "aware of the possibility of danger." Entire families would disappear if someone "touched on any negative aspects of the ruling party." One day in 2000, he and his father tried to swim across the Tumen River in to China to get rice to help feed their hungry family, Song said. The river was swollen from heavy rain, and his father was swept away. Song ran to get help from the border guards, but they only shouted "Why didn't you die with him?" before beating him unconscious. He spent six months in a forced labor camp, where he lost part of a finger from an infection and began thinking about defecting, inspired by stories about life in the South. In Song's exhibition brochure, the dean of Hongik University's fine arts graduate school, Han Jin-Man, writes that Song has used his art "to become free from a nightmare that keeps repeating every night." "He is paying off an old score in his inner world by expressing" his life in North Korea through humor, Han writes. "He could not live without expressing the trouble of youth directly in his works."
[Associated
Press;
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