99% Invisible - 506- Monumental Diplomacy
Episode Date: September 7, 2022In downtown Windhoek, Namibia -- at the intersection of Fidel Castro Street and Robert Mugabe Avenue -- there's an imposing gold building with an affectionate nickname: the Coffee Maker. This notable ...structure was built to commemorate Namibia’s fight for independence from apartheid South Africa, which it achieved in 1990. And for many of the visitors, the museum feels like a huge achievement. But for a museum that commemorates throwing off the chains of colonialism and forging a new era of self-determination, it has one pretty strange feature. It wasn't designed by a Namibian architect. It wasn't even designed by an African architect. It was built by North Korea's state-run design studio, which has long been a prolific maker of statues around the world. North Korea has left a distinct visual stamp across Africa in particular, with museums and monuments erected in more than a dozen African countries since the 1970s.Monumental Diplomacy
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This is 99% invisible. I'm Roman Morris.
In downtown Vindhook, Namibia, at the intersection of Fiel Castro Street and Robert Mugabe Avenue,
there is an imposing gold building with an affectionate nickname.
I call it the coffee machine.
They call it this coffee machine.
In the minutes it's like a coffee machine, not the right piece.
It's the big golden coffee machine looking building on the hill.
It stands five stories above the adjacent traffic circle,
and it really does look a lot like a big industrial coffee maker that you'd find in a banquet hall.
It's a huge gold and black cylinder on stilts with an empty space underneath.
Two big glass elevators run up the legs.
This sleek, ultra-modern building is a museum.
That's reporter Ryan Lenora Brown,
she's based in South Africa.
It was built to commemorate Namibia's fight for independence
from apartheid South Africa, which it achieved in 1990.
And for many of the visitors I spoke with,
the museum feels like a huge achievement.
The artifacts, the statues, everything, the effort, like it's a thumbs up for them, I'm
really proud.
Like, these are one of the places that I can say I'm proud of in my country.
But for a museum that commemorates throwing off the chains of colonialism and forging a
new era of self-determination, it has one pretty strange feature.
It wasn't designed by a Namibian
architect. It wasn't even designed by an African architect. Do you know who made this museum?
I have no idea. It was North Korea. Is it? Good to know, actually. Oh, look, forget that.
Namibia's Independence Memorial Museum was imagined and built by North Korea's state-run designs to you.
In fact, North Korea is one of the most prolific builders of monuments around the world.
The country has left a distinct visual stamp across Africa in particular.
It's constructed museums and monuments in more than a dozen African countries since the 1970s.
There's the African Renaissance statue in Dakre Senegal that's taller than the statue
of Liberty and shows a family-reaching triumphantly towards the sky.
There's a futuristic mausoleum to the first president of Angola, so space age, it's known
locally as Sputnik.
And in the Democratic Republic of Congo, there's a huge statue of former President Laurent
Kabila.
It stands on a base whose text just says,
National Hero, in all caps.
There's a good chance you've seen North Korea's design work
before, even if you didn't realize it.
And the story of how North Korea came to be one of the world's
leading exporters of statues and monuments, goes back decades.
To a moment when North Korea wasn't the paranoid and isolated
hermit kingdom we think of today.
Instead, it was a young socialist upstart on a diplomatic tour, trying to prove itself to the world.
Before World War II, Korea was a Japanese colony.
After the war, the Allies took over the peninsula and divided it into two.
It became one of the fronts of the Cold War
North Korea was backed by the Soviet Union and South Korea was occupied by the US
Each country saw itself as the rightful ruler of the entire peninsula to prove their claim
Both sides began a global PR blitz to show the world that they were the one true Korean nation
Basically North and South Korea in a diplomatic competition for who could get the most
recognition in international forums.
That's Ben Young.
He's a historian at Virginia Commonwealth University and the author of Guns, Gorillas, and the Great
Leader, North Korea and the Third World.
So they went to countries in the South Pacific, really small countries like Narururu or Tuvalu.
But really the primary space where North Korean South Korea competed for diplomatic recognition
was in Africa.
This was for a simple reason.
Africa was emerging from a long era of European colonization, and as these new countries began
to win their independence, they hadn't necessarily picked aside in the Cold War, and many were open to new alliances.
For these newly independent African countries, North Korea had an appealing pitch, delivered
by its leader Kim Il Sung.
He would show them how to be a modern, developed country that wasn't Western or white.
North Korea had done it it and so could they.
You have a lot of post-colonial officials and leaders and government ministers
going to North Korea in the 1970s and 60s talking about how much they saw
North Korea as an admirable model of development with its free and universal
healthcare system with its rapid industrialization and also the fact that it was this independent state that didn't have foreign troops and their soil.
What North Korea was offering to its potential African allies was a kind of independence starter kit.
It was everything you'd need to build a country like they had from military training and weapons to factories and agricultural
projects, and eventually the statues and monuments you'd need to celebrate your triumph over
colonialism.
Which brings us back to Namibia, a country in southern Africa that became entangled with
North Korea during its own independence struggle.
Like the people of North Korea, Namibians had been victims of brutal colonial
rule. First, the territory had been a German colony, called Southwest Africa. Then, in 1915,
the territory came under South Africa's control. That was supposed to be a temporary arrangement,
but South Africa took over and refused to let go. That meant that from the late 1940s onward,
Namibia was ruled under South Africa's racist apartheid regime.
Resistance to apartheid was met with violence,
and by the early 1960s,
anti-apartheid activists in both South Africa
and what is now known as Namibia
had decided that the only way forward
was to take up arms themselves.
Many of them fled into exile to train as soldiers.
We need not only reading books, but also we have to learn how to use guns and leverage
the Namibian people from the chronic rule.
Mandume Meshiko was in his early 20s when he joined the armed wing of Namibia's liberation movement.
The movement received support from across the socialist world, and some soldiers spent
time training in places like the Soviet Union and China.
During Mondume's training, he was assigned to spend a year in a place he'd never heard
much about, North Korea.
And so one day he got on a plane and flew to Pyongyang, where it turned out his hosts
were startled by him. Some were running away to see a black skin, some are coming to touch, even grown up people.
They say, what is black? What type of skin is that?
To us, we were very lucky and we got to them.
From his North Korean teachers, Mandu may learn to shoot a gun.
He studied the differences between capitalism and communism.
He trained as a farmer,
and he learned to love spicy noodle soup.
His host told him,
you'll be need to know all these things
to run a modern socialist country one day.
I mean, maybe not the soup thing, but the rest of it.
It was very advanced,
and we said,
oh, these people, they developed their country.
We want to do the same thing.
When we go back, we want to develop our country like this.
If they do things like that one, why not us?
By the early 1970s, about 2,500 soldiers from across Africa
had received training much like Mondumes.
In Namibia, these soldiers joined a guerrilla war against the apartheid government.
They planted mines and bombs and attacked military convoyes.
They blew up infrastructure like bridges, tunnels, and border posts.
This war of sabotage was meant to wear down and isolate South Africa, one of the last white
governments on the continent.
North Korea was one of several socialist countries
supporting armed liberation movements in Africa.
And a lot of its support was what you'd expect,
in the form of guns and military expertise.
But the country was also establishing its African presence
in less orthodox ways.
North Korea's leader, Kim Il Sung, knew the crucial role that architecture and design
could play in building a new nation.
In North Korea, he had made the built landscape into a kind of giant, open air history lesson.
There were murals, statues, and reliefs everywhere in public squares and train stations.
All the public art reinforced the story of the country's triumph over imperialism.
And of course, the glorious leader who led that fight.
The epicenter for this kind of art in North Korea was a massive design studio located in Pyongyang.
It was called Monsu-de. The studio was founded in 1959, and it was part artist's colony, part factory, and all propaganda machine.
Among months, today's greatest hits
were a 65-foot tall bronze statue of Kim himself,
and a series of huge mosaics of the Great Leader
displayed in Pyongyang's metro stations.
In one, he is literally the sun,
shining down over an imagined reunification
of North and South Korea.
These monuments were all done in a style called Socialist Realism. It's an artistic genre that
started in the Soviet Union and was perfected in the Cold War communist world. And despite the name,
it's not really about representing reality. It's more about utopia. Reality as you or your government would like it to be. Think Russian peasants striding joyfully through a sun-dappled wheat field, or Chairman Mao surrounded by a crowd of happy Chinese factory workers. North Korean artists became masters of the form. And artists in turn became a revered part of North Korean society.
In one word, it was joyous. We didn't create voluntarily, but we would get this paper with slogans that we have to paint.
For example, let's show our loyalty for the Kim family.
And then we would stay up all night
to paint those slogans on the streets
so that laborers can see them and be motivated
to show their loyalty to the Kim family.
That's Bioke Song.
I spoke with him through a translator.
Decades ago, he was a worker at a steel factory
in the North Korean city of Song Rim.
He says that just for fun, he used to sometimes sketch his colleagues on their smoke bricks.
One day, a party official saw his drawings and offered him a job making propaganda posters
for the local government in that region.
It was prestigious work. 아무래도 김실가를 찬냥하는 직업이라.
Because it's a work of praising the Kim family,
we were looked at with a certain sense of pride.
And also it was manual labor. We worked with brushes.
So other regular workers were envious.
And my parents also took great pride in my work.
I was so proud in my work. For over a decade, Manseude had focused on creating work for the great leader, and in
the process became a state-sponsored arts behemoth.
It would eventually become a massive campus, with more than 1,000 working artists and its
own soccer stadium, clinic, paper mill, and kindergarten.
Most of the country's best artists ended up there.
But in the 1970s, around the same time
Mondume Michiko was training in the North Korean military camp,
the studio decided to expand its work into other parts of the world.
It founded a division called Monsude Overseas Projects.
Now, North Korea wouldn't just be training
and funding guerrilla fighters across Africa. They would also be designing monuments and memorials for their allies when they achieved
liberation.
This monument diplomacy was well received, especially because it was subsidized from start to finish
by the North Korean government.
Benzude artists and architects designed these works in Pyongyang and then constructed them
on-site with their own crew of workers,
all without the recipient country, lifting a finger.
But just as North Korea's statue exports were picking up,
its fortunes as a country were plummeting.
In the 1980s, the country's economy began to crash.
South Korea was already pulling ahead
when North was dealt a near fatal blow.
From ADC, this is World News Tonight with Peter Jennings, reporting tonight from Berlin.
From the Berlin Walls specifically, take a look at them.
They've been there since last night.
They are here in the thousands.
They are here in the tens of thousands.
Occasionally they shout, Dimao was vexed, the wall must go.
The Soviet Union fell and the Cold War ended.
And in the process, North Korea lost its main sponsor and supporter.
The North Koreans had always talked to big game about self-sufficiency.
But the reality was that the country had always relied heavily on Soviet aid.
And without it, they fell into crisis.
The country's economy all but collapsed.
And then when it was hit with a series of natural disasters, people began to starve.
The world increasingly saw North Korea as a pariah state, with a cruel and ruthless
leader at the helm.
Although the North Korean government refused most outside help, it was desperate for hard
currency.
And one of its few remaining exports, one of its last points of connection with the outside
world, was its giant statues.
Quite honestly, the only country
that really does socialist rails on is North Korea.
That's historian Ben Young again.
He says the big bold theatrical style still had appeal,
especially to young African countries
trying to shape how people saw their history.
If you're an African post-school nation and you're looking for something that is
decidedly non-western, that is anti-colonial, you're going to be looking at the North Koreans.
And the North Korean artists and sculptors, they're very talented and they also come cheap.
and sculptors, they're very talented and they also come cheap. This is the day for which 10,000 of Namibian patriots lay down their lives.
In 1990, Namibia finally negotiated its independence after more than a century of struggle, first
under German and then South African rule.
One of the leaders of its guerrilla movement,
Sam Niyoma, became the first president.
Today, our hearts are filled with a great joy
and the jubilation.
But as with any country born out of a long struggle,
Niyoma and other Nominbian leaders faced a massive challenge
in uniting people behind a new story
about the nation.
The history Namibians had received from their colonizers taught them every single day that
they were inferior and uncivilized, a people without history.
The narrative was so eye-to-mination that that's just the kind of history we have been
given.
That's Gerhard Gaurirab, who grew up in pre-independence Namibia.
Back then, history lessons focused on the great empires of Europe
and the civilizing powers of white people in Africa.
There were no counter-history.
We didn't hear about liberation movements.
So, the kind of history there was in the documentation.
And even in the new Namibia, that history loomed large.
There were physical relics of colonialism everywhere in the form of old colonial buildings and colonial monuments.
The Namibian government decided it was time to tell a new story, one centered on liberation.
In 2001, Namibia's cabinet approved a plan
to build a museum on the site of one of those colonial monuments.
It was a deeply controversial statue
of a German soldier called the writer Denkmal.
The site had also been a concentration camp
where Namibians were held by Germans in the early 1900s.
And so the location of the new museum was symbolic.
A museum is not a neutral institution.
It's a powerful institution to mold the mind of the people, to let them understand the
message of we have overcome the colonization of this country, and this is what we are.
Gururab is also a historian and would go on to become the museum's curator once it was built.
After considering a range of designs, the Namibian government chose North Korea's
men's Suday to build the Independence Museum.
The choice was in many ways a strange one.
The new Namibia wasn't a socialist dictatorship.
It was a democracy. Its views in the world seemed almost diametrically opposed to those of North Korea.
But North Korea was also an old friend. During the Cold War, when many countries in the West, including the US,
had worked against Namibian independence, North Korea had supported them. During those dark days, North Korea was one of those countries which supported
liberation movements in Africa.
And in the new Namibia, Monsude had already built a number of projects,
including a memorial to heroes of the liberation struggle, a new presidential palace,
a munitions factory, and a military museum.
So looking from that background, our leaders have decided to ask the North Korean company to build the museum.
The museum opened on March 21st, 2014, Namibian Independence Day.
In front of it, almost exactly where the writer Dent Mall Colonial statue once stood,
was a huge statue of Namibia's first president,
Sam Neyoma.
His right arm was thrust towards the sky,
holding a copy of Namibia's Constitution.
How great is that?
Welcome, or what do you want?
It's a tour.
It's a tour.
Gerhard Gurirab gave me a tour
of the Independence Memorial Museum.
And at the start, I was feeling a bit skeptical.
I'd seen images of Monsude's other works in Africa.
From a distance, a lot of them looked loud and kind of obvious, maybe a little bit tacky.
We are in the first gallery of the Independence Memorial Museum.
But it's one thing to see a photo of a giant monsoony mural.
It's totally different to be actually standing in front of one.
And in the first gallery of the museum
are two Florida ceiling paintings that immediately floored me.
We are depicting the history of the early resistance
in the country.
And here we do have images of the first warriors of this country.
The painting he's describing shows dozens, maybe hundreds of people, lined up in rows facing the viewer.
Some are wearing uniforms and carrying magazines of ammunition, others hold wooden spears.
Each of them is painted in vivid, hyper realistic detail. And the collective effect is striking.
This is over a century of Namibian resistance
compressed into a single moment.
And this one's very important because when people walk in,
this is going to be the very, very first thing they see.
Yes.
So what do you want people's impression to be
when they just walk in and see this?
This is how our, let's say ancestors of first, freedom fighters of this country look like.
The backbone of the museum are these giant immersive Montsoude artworks and some of them have
a lot of violent and gruesome imagery. There's a gallery about the Namibian genocide. It was
carried out by the Germans in the early 1900s and the walls are indented with huge scratch
marks that represent people's desperate
attempts to escape from German concentration camps.
These scratches from men and women and also of children, which have been brutalized or
killed during those days.
It's hard not to come away from these images with a sense of the incredible price that
Namibia paid to be free.
But as we move through the museum, the North Korean connection also starts to get more and
more obvious.
We see here images of Dr. Sen Nuyuma with President of North Korea.
So the one of North Korea is there in the center?
Yes.
It's in a gold frame.
All the other ones are not framed.
Yes.
Yeah. So they chose to put that one in the center like that. Yes. It's in a gold frame. All the other ones are not framed. Yes. Yeah. So they just put that one in the center like that. Yeah. And then finally, in the last
room of the museum, is an image that I can only describe as very, very North
Korean. There are 10 people in this mural. This is a very important image for Namibia.
After independence, this is how our people have been. Looking up, you can see all walks of life, our farmers, our brothers and sisters, our children's
school going past us, the architects, main workers.
They're all facing a rainbow sun, which is emanating rays in the colors of the Namibian flag, red, green, and blue.
Hovering above the entire image is the face of Namibia's great leader, Sam Niyoma.
Yeah, because it is how we see ourselves now,
independent people looking up to the new tone.
The image feels like heavy-handed propaganda,
but you know what else does? Mount Rushmore.
There's nothing more excessive
than carving the heads of your favorite presidents
into the side of a mountain.
Patriotism lends itself to monumentalist art.
This is the new birth of a nation
with the new symbols of nationalism.
So that is what people really see when they leave this museum.
I think about what Gerhard Geri Robb told me about his history classes growing up, where
he was told again and again that he was primitive, that civilization had been given to him by white
people.
Around us in the museum are lots of young Namibians,
browsing the exhibits, being told a very different story
about who they are and where they come from.
I think mostly for me, it serves a reminder
of what the ancestors did, you know, my forefathers,
the fight, so I really like that.
It can, in times where I feel like I'm not grateful enough
for the freedom that I have,
coming here sort of just reminds me to be grateful.
The Independence Memorial Museum has clearly served
an important purpose.
It's helped reorient the story of Namibia
around the struggle to be free.
But less than a decade after opening, the museum is already starting to show signs of where
tiles are falling off the facade.
The TV screens and many of the exhibits aren't working.
And more people have started to ask questions about the building's provenance.
North Korea is widely recognized as a country under a brutal and oppressive regime. In 2017,
Monsude overseas projects was one of four North Korean state-owned companies sanctioned by the UN.
The intention was to deter North Korea from further expanding its nuclear weapons program.
That largely ended Monsude's reign as perveyors of socialist realist art around the world.
In view of that, there's a new generation of Namibians asking why such an important national institution
wasn't built with more Namibian involvement.
The museum shows its foreignness in big and small ways.
Well, the murals don't look Namibian at all.
The people don't look Namibian, and it's very hard to look at.
This is Indenda Shavute Nakapunda, the curator of the National Art Gallery,
which is a short walk from the Independence Museum.
And she finds the images in the museum unsettling in a number of ways,
starting with the basic fact that the people in the images look subtly North Korean.
Not that we've got one image, but they just don't look black.
They don't have artistic, you know, black features.
She also thinks the museum could have done more to integrate traditional Nambibian architecture and design.
And then there's also the story the museum tells. It feels gruesome and oversimplified, she says.
There's the blood, there the decapitated bodies, there the the bombs and then at the end you have that
massive mural where you know they're people standing sunshine, freedom and flowers.
It just feels like a school takes work, very simplified kind of like one, two, three and
then this is how we got to area.
But even so, young Namibians like Indenda are using the museum in ways that were probably
not imagined by its designers. There's a word here for the generation of Namibians born afterenda are using the museum in ways that were probably not imagined by its designers.
There's a word here for the generation of Namibians born after the end of apartheid, the Born Freeze.
Many older Namibians have a lifelong loyalty to the political leaders who led the Liberation Movement.
But Born Freeze are much more irreverent.
And in recent years, they've been at the forefront of movements fighting corruption and advocating for LGBTQ rights.
Some of these protests have taken place right at the foot of the enormous Samuoma statue in front of the museum.
And I find that very interesting, because the protesters have been taking up that space at the staircase, with him towering over them.
with him towering over them.
One of the most important differences between putting up this kind of art in North Korea
and putting it up in Namibia is that
in a democratic society, people can decide
what the art means to them.
They can interact with it in ways that challenge its meaning.
It's almost impossible to imagine ordinary North Koreans being free to stage protests
at the side of a towering Kim Jong-il statue.
But the equivalent is happening in Namibia.
The Independence Museum might be steering people towards one version of the past,
but conversations are also swirling around it, adding new layers to that meaning all the time.
If you say we've got liberties and freedom, well then show it to us.
I don't think they thought that space would be used like that.
I've lived in southern Africa for almost a decade now, and I'm still struck by how history
here often feels like wet clay,
something that's still soft and can still be reshaped. There are no Kim Il songs in a country
like Namibia. No one is untouchable in that way. At best, there are Sam Niyomas, brave people
with messy imperfect legacies that are still being debated. You can still build statues to that kind of person, of course,
but they're always going to feel like they could be toppled.
Coming up after the break, we hear more from former propaganda artist, Bjok Song, and his
remarkable journey out of North Korea.
We're back with Ryan Lenora Brown, who reported this week's story. And Ryan, we're going to be talking more about the artist, Bjok Sung, who we heard from
in the main story, and he's the North Korean artist.
Yeah, that's right.
And Bjok Sung has an amazing story of his own that we wanted listeners to hear about, because
while he worked for years as a propaganda artist in North Korea, he actually eventually escaped
the country.
Okay, so tell us how that happened.
So for a number of years, he was working
as a propaganda painter and actually not for Monsude.
He worked for his local government,
basically making posters to hang up around the city
where he lived, glorified the Kim family,
encouraged people to be loyal workers.
But he knew of Monsude because it was basically
the highest pinnacle that a propaganda worker
like himself might ascend to. 그래서 제가 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 그는 It was about a dream. I couldn't even imagine, I didn't dare to imagine,
that I would end up there.
In order to work there, you will have to graduate
from an elite art college in the capital Pyongyang,
and then have to be a member of the party.
Thousands of artists from a comprehensive full of talents,
like statue, oil painting, and handcraft work there.
And for me, from my background, it was hard to imagine
that I can someday go there.
Huh.
So Monsu-day is kind of like the Harvard of propaganda artwork.
Yeah, that's right.
And the artists there are really revered in North Korea.
But even outside Monsu-day, being an artist in North Korea
is pretty good work.
It's spared Biyuk from having to do hard labor, for instance.
And he was producing these works that people he knew
were going to see out in public.
So there was a lot of pride attached to it, too.
But then everything started to change in the 90s
when famine began to spread across North Korea.
That's also important.
The most important thing is to bring the family. 그거도 이제 중요하지만, 제일 서준한 것은 가족이 제일 서준하거든요.
Although pride is important, what matters the most is your family.
Only when family is prosper, the country can prosper.
But during the 1990s, the Russian system of North Korea completely collapsed.
And people could no longer get food from the government
and people had to watch their family members die from starvation.
And what kind of hope could you have in the situation for the country of North Korea?
So, Biaxong's family simply just didn't have enough to eat.
My family was on the brink of death as well. So my father and I crossed over to China to let my family survive.
But as we were crossing the river, my father got swept away.
And I got arrested by the border guards while trying to save him.
The oppression by the border guards that I had to endure cannot be described in words.
And all that I had left after my time at the facility
was hate for the Kim family.
And I regretted the life that I had lived.
That is just unbelievably tragic.
It's so sad to hear.
Yeah, so eventually a Biaxong was released
and he crossed the border into China again.
And this time he made it.
But many, many other people did not.
It's hard to know exactly how many people died, but it's estimated that between 1994 and 1998,
500,000 North Koreans died from starvation, including a lot of Song's family.
Some experts actually think the number is much higher as high as two or three million.
Wow. So, Yaxong made it into China. What happened then?
He settled in South Korea first, and later he moved to Germany, which is where he lives now.
And he watched Monsude become this big player in places like Namibia, building these works that
were commemorating independence and liberation.
He said it was really painful to see.
I used to see their works in the news. And I have even met a worker from Bansu de Studio
who was dispatched overseas but arrived eventually in South Korea.
Because North Korea is a dictatorship, when people are dispatched overseas to create statues
or paintings, all the money that they earn and salary is taken by the North Korean government.
And it makes me sad to see them.
Why should they leave the life of a slave even outside of North Korea?
The statues that they built, they are worth tens of thousands of dollars a piece.
But these workers don't even know how much North Korea is getting for their work. What they only get is some food items like rice and cooking oil sent by the government
to their family members in North Korea.
But the fascinating thing is that Biyok's own art has taken this really interesting turn.
So I want to show you one of his more recent paintings.
So this is a painting of North Korean flag as if it was painted on a wall.
There's like a crack in the wall and all these men are shoving their heads into it.
Maybe pushing each other into it, kind of maybe burying their heads in it in a weird way,
it's really striking and quite cool actually. Yeah, so what Biaxong has done is to take the
stylized work of socialist realism, which is the style he worked in as a propaganda artist for the state, and use it to satirize the North Korean regime.
But it actually took him a while after he left North Korea to get to that place as an artist.
It was embarrassing at first.
I only tried to paint what's beautiful in a beautiful way,
but my professor told me to find something that only I have
to look for that and dig deeper into it and study it.
And I thought hard and concluded that my mission,
the purpose of my painting,
should be to reveal the reality of North Korea as it is.
Nothing added, nothing subtracted.
So that settled in my mind as my mission.
I love this trying to add new realism to his socialist realism.
Yeah, no, I agree.
And I think for me what's really interesting about these images is that they're quite funny,
right?
They draw attention to the fact that North Korea is this weird, isolated little country that can be really easy to laugh at. But, you know, also below the
surface under that comedy are these really kind of painful, tragic undertones. You can feel in this
art that the stakes of North Korea's regime, you know, its paranoid, repressive behavior. It's
actually people's lives.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, I'm really happy to get deeper insight
into the song after North Korea,
because this is really amazing work.
And he seems like even more like an amazing character
that he was, like in the original story
that you presented, it's outstanding.
Thank you so much.
Yeah, thank you so much for having me. ["Piano Music"]
99% in visible was produced this week by Ryan Brown, edited by Kelly Prime and our executive producer, Delaney Hall.
Original music by Swan Rial,
sound mix in additional production by Martin Gonzalez,
by checking by Graham Haysha.
Kurt Colstad is our digital director, the rest of the team,
includes Vivian Leigh, Chris Baroupe, Jason Delion,
Christopher Johnson, Emmett Fitzgerald,
Lashemadon, Jacob Multanada Medina,
Joe Rosenberg, Sophia Klatsker, and me Roman Mars.
Special thanks this week to St. Un Gong,
Dashaan Moodley, Cambanda V, Alison Chirera,
Hildegard Titus, Nashi Longway Shipei, and Yaku Vosterfall.
We are part of the Stitcher and Sirius Exam Podcast family.
Now I had courted six blocks north in the Pandora building.
In beautiful.
Uptown, Oakland, California.
You can find the show and join discussions about the show on Facebook.
You can tweet me at Roman Mars and I show at 99PI org on Instagram and Reddit too.
You can find links to other Stitch your shows I love, as well
as every past episode of 99PI at 99PI.org.
you