Published on: 2025/07/28 15:35
Hello and welcome to your AI guide to the latest cultural updates from Korea. Here's our top story.
The Culture Ministry is expanding its AI content support program, aiming to boost Korea's competitiveness in the industry. Support will now go beyond the production stage to encompass the entire content life cycle, from planning to distribution and promotion.
In partnership with the Korea Creative Content Agency, the ministry will launch the "K-Content AI Innovation Leadership Project," injecting 21 billion won, or over 15 million dollars, from the government's supplementary budget.
The initiative aims to move past short-term production aid to foster new business models across the content industry, with a focus on global market expansion and broader industrial impact.
Renowned Japanese installation artist Chiharu Shiota has returned to Korea with her first solo exhibition in three years.
Known for her intricate, large-scale installations, Shiota has earned wide acclaim at major international venues including the Grand Palais in Paris and the ICA Watershed in Boston.
Her Korea exhibition, "Return to Earth," now open at Seoul's Gana Art Center, expands on themes she has long explored, such as memory, identity, and the human condition, bringing them into a more universal dimension.
At a press preview, Shiota reflected on how her cancer diagnosis prompted a deeper meditation in her work.
The exhibition runs through September 7.
As the peak summer holiday season begins, an estimated 800,000 people visited beaches along Gangwon-do Province's east coast over the final weekend of July.
According to provincial authorities, more than 420,700 beachgoers were recorded at 83 beaches in the region on Sunday alone.
Gangneung saw the highest number of visitors, followed by Goseong, Samcheok, Donghae, and Yangyang.
The total number of beachgoers in the province this summer has now topped 1.7 million.
That's all from me. Stay tuned to the Kulture Wave.
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