White tiger, dark horse: North Korean art
market heats up
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[October 04, 2017]
DANDONG, China (Reuters) - Seated
beneath tall windows and dressed simply in singlets and trousers, North
Korean painters are hard at work. The artists staple canvases to frames
or copy idyllic landscapes from laptop computers. One wears headphones
as he brushes a group of running horses onto his canvas.
The nine men have come to the Chinese border town of Dandong from
Mansudae Art Studio, North Korea's largest producer of art. There are
many outlets like this along the border; they house some of the
thousands of North Korean artists who cater to burgeoning demand for
their work. "Chinese have begun collecting art, and North Korean art is
much easier and cheaper for them to obtain," says Park Young-jeong, a
research fellow at the Korea Culture and Tourism Institute, a
Seoul-based organization.
In recent years as countries have responded to North Korea's weapons
tests with sanctions, Mansudae and other art studios have increasingly
played a more controversial role – helping Pyongyang raise cash abroad.
North Korea has long been punished for alleged underhand dealings in
minerals, finance and arms; art was seen more as a channel for mutual
understanding. That is changing.
Mansudae is run by the North Korean state. Its output ranges from
statues of global leaders to propaganda posters, embroidery and more. It
has built monuments and statues in at least 15 African countries,
according to independent United Nations sanctions experts.
In a report in February, they said that a part of Mansudae called
Mansudae Overseas Projects was a front for the North Korean state to
cash in on military deals. As well as monumental statues, they found it
built military installations such as a munitions factory and bases in
Namibia.
The North Korean U.N. mission did not respond to a request for comment
and no one from Mansudae could be reached.
The U.N. Security Council banned Mansudae's statue business in 2016. On
Aug. 5, after Pyongyang conducted more weapons tests, the Security
Council blacklisted Mansudae Art Studio, subjecting it to a global asset
freeze and travel ban. Diplomats say this will prevent Mansudae from
conducting business.
"With this listing, anything Mansudae produces - including paintings,
other artwork, monuments, buildings, and other construction - cannot be
bought and should be frozen per the asset freeze," said a U.N. Security
Council diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity.
In a further resolution on Sept. 11, the Security Council decided that
all joint ventures with North Korean entities or individuals must be
shut down within 120 days, or by mid-January.
Exactly what the measures mean for existing Mansudae art has yet to
become clear. In Beijing's art district, a gallery called the Mansudae
Art Gallery says it is the studio's official overseas gallery. Its head
insists the sanctions do not apply to it and says they have had no
impact on his business.
"Now more than ever we need avenues like art to create understanding
between North Korea and the rest of the world," said Ji Zhengtai.
It is not possible to estimate the total value of Mansudae's dealings,
but the Security Council diplomat said the business had earned tens of
millions of dollars globally.
"WE DON'T DO POLITICS"
Mansudaeartsudio.com, a website in Italy which calls itself Mansudae's
"official website abroad," says the studio is "probably the largest art
production center in the world."
Mansudae's Pyongyang studio covers 120,000 sq m (nearly 30 acres),
employs about 4,000 people including around 1,000 artists, and is
divided into 13 creative groups, seven manufacturing plants and more
than 50 supply departments, the website says.
The website is run by Pier Luigi Cecioni, who sells Mansudae works
online and at fairs through what he calls an exclusive agreement with
Mansudae Art Studio. He declined to say how much he sells, but in August
after the sanctions on Mansudae Art Studio were announced, he told
Reuters that the revenues go direct to the studio to pay for paints and
equipment.
Cecioni said he sells works from his personal collection, most of them
bought several years ago - before sanctions on Mansudae were announced.
His website makes clear that any online purchase is made with his
Italian company, not Mansudae. U.N. sanctions are not retroactive.
A panel of independent experts is charged with monitoring U.N. sanctions
on North Korea. It reports violations and recommendations to the
Security Council's North Korea sanctions committee. Its reports are
confidential, but the committee traditionally publishes annual reports.
Hugh Griffiths, who heads the panel, declined to comment, saying "the
matter is subject to an ongoing investigation."
Cecioni said, "the last thing I want is to have trouble with Italian or
American authorities. I have strong contacts, especially with the
Italian ones, and they help me to respect all the rules." An Italian
foreign ministry source said it is customary to keep contact with
everyone who has ties to countries under sanctions, to ensure they
respect Italy's international commitments.
In September, Cecioni said that he had no plans to shut down his
operation. "I consider it very important to let people know that ...
North Koreans do not make only bombs but also art and are common
people," he said. He postponed an exhibition of propaganda posters he
had planned for September in Treviso, but said this was because
Mansudae's representatives told him they thought it unwise to showcase
their anti-U.S. tone in the current climate.
[to top of second column] |
Choi Sang Kyun, head of Gallery Pyongyang, poses for photographs
with a North Korean propaganda poster that he collected, during an
interview with Reuters in Seoul, South Korea, August 24, 2017. The
slogan reads "U.S. troops out immediately!". REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji
Word of the sanctions has been slower to reach China. A circular
from its Commerce Ministry announcing the start date of the measures
which included Mansudae Art Studio does not name Mansudae. Asked why
not, the ministry did not respond.
The Dandong center works in partnership with Mansudae, said its
manager, Gai Longji. Asked on the day the sanctions took effect if
they were affecting business, he did not answer directly.
"We don't do politics," he said. "We do art." Liaoning Sanyi, the
firm behind the center, did not respond to a request for comment.
WHITE TIGER
Reuters spoke to at least 30 experts - collectors, art historians,
academics and people who have sold North Korean art globally. Many
said the market for paintings is niche and amounts to little in
terms of revenue compared with the billion-plus dollars North Korea
has raised every year selling coal and other minerals abroad.
Even so, they say North Korean diplomats in Europe have been
enthusiastic to promote art exhibitions with the simple aim of
bringing in hard currency.
In China, demand has really taken off. Dandong is a popular
attraction for tourists who come to peep at North Koreans over the
Yalu River border. Busloads of tourists show up every morning.
Visitors sample a North Korean specialty of noodles in cold soup,
watch North Korean women sing and dance, and buy North Korean
paintings.
Besides Mansudae, just about every ministry and almost all the local
authorities in North Korea have an art studio, said Koen De Ceuster,
a lecturer in Korean studies at Leiden University who has been
studying North Korean art for over a decade. "There's studios all
across the country," he said.
Other prominent studio names include Paekho and the Central Arts
Studio. Paekho, which means "white tiger" in Korean, is the biggest
seller of popular paintings in Dandong, traders there said.
Collectors who have dealt with Paekho say it is run by North Korea's
military - Reuters could not independently establish this. Paekho's
varied output includes propaganda posters calling for a nuclear-free
world.
The Dandong center that Reuters visited has hosted around 500 North
Korean artists since 2014, manager Gai said. They stay for between
six months and three years.
Many Dandong galleries house North Korean painters. Staff there said
they have sold North Korean paintings for as much as $100,000 to
buyers around the world. Art experts agree the pieces can very
occasionally fetch six-figure sums.
Not all the proceeds go to Pyongyang. Mark-ups can reach four or
five times the dealer's purchase price, according to one Dandong
dealer.
LONG GAME
While the Security Council's Aug. 5 sanctions targeted only
Mansudae, its September resolution on joint ventures also included
restrictions on North Korean labor: This combination could hurt
everyone in the art business, Dandong traders say.
But there are ways around the measures, they add. For instance,
paintings from Mansudae could be sold under the name of an art
studio that hasn't been sanctioned. Artists come to China under
cultural exchange visas, not as workers. And two businessmen said
paintings have long been accepted instead of cash in the barter
deals that fuel the region's economy.
At the other end of the border from Dandong in the city of Yanji,
Chinese antiques dealer Zhao Xiangchen said people usually roll up a
couple of paintings and carry them quietly across the border to him.
His antiques stall was thick with dust as he camped in a vacant slot
next door, selling the paintings online.
Since the sanctions were announced, Zhao said, Chinese customs have
become more vigilant.
"But I'm playing the long game," he said. "I still think there's
huge latent demand for North Korean art in the Chinese market,
that's only set to grow."
(Sue-Lin Wong reported from Dandong, Beijing and Yanji, Giselda
Vagnoni from Rome, Fanny Potkin from London; With additional
reporting by Heekyong Yang in Seoul, Michelle Nichols and Barbara
Goldberg in New York, Stephanie Nebehay in Geneva and the Beijing
newsroom; Edited by Sara Ledwith)
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