
Interview: French winds and familiar faces who sustain SFF's chamber music spirit
For a chamber music festival to continue for 20 years, many things must come together. Chief among them are a devoted artistic director, innovative programming, a stable operation and a growing interest in chamber music -- a genre defined by its intimate scale, where a small group of musicians perform without a conductor.
Equally vital are the musicians themselves -- both the loyal artists who return year after year and the new participants who bring fresh energy -- who collectively sustain the festival's spirit and artistic quality.
For this year's Seoul Spring Chamber Music Festival, taking place April 22-May 4, 69 artists have gathered for 14 performances.
Among them are four French wind players: oboist Olivier Doise, clarinetist Romain Guyot, flutist Matthieu Gauci-Ancelin and horn player Herve Joulain.
Doise, Guyot and Joulain are SSF regulars who clear their schedules every year for the two-week event.
'It was not easy to bring audiences to a chamber music festival. Korean audiences tend to prefer big orchestras and grand productions. Director Kang Dong-suk still fights to attract the audience, discovering new pieces not only for the piano but for wind instrument as well," Guyot said during an interview last week.
'We know we will play new pieces togehter -- it has become a priority in our schedule,' he added.
The clarinetist, who is principal clarinetist of the Orchestre de la Suisse Romande in Geneva and an acclaimed soloist and educator, has returned to the festival for 12 times since the inauguration in 2006, the most frequently returning overseas musician for the SFF.
Doise, principal oboist of the Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France and a professor at the Conservatoire National Superieur de Musique et de Danse de Paris, also spoke about the unique energy he feels from Korean audiences. He has participated in the festival since 2015, missing only 2021 and 2022 when the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted international travel.
'Chamber music festivals usually aren't this long,' Doise said. 'Here, for two weeks, we can work, practice and rehearse — it feels like our home. Everything is so well organized that we only have to think about the music we play.'
For the past 15 years, the musicians have returned to the same hotel in central Seoul, where they stay, practice and rehearse -- a small but telling detail that reflects the festival's stable and well-established operation.
For Joulain, returning to Korea each spring has become an annual tradition since 2014. One of France's leading horn players, having held principal positions with the Orchestre Philharmonique de Radio France and Orchestre National de France, Joulain said "Korea feels like home now."
Flutist Gauci-Ancelin joined the festival for the first time this year, stepping in as a last-minute substitute just two weeks ago. Over six days, he faces a demanding schedule, performing eight different pieces.
A frequent guest principal flutist with the Berlin Philharmonic, Gauci-Ancelin said, "Although it's my first time here, I know many of the musicians," adding, "I really appreciate the family-like atmosphere."
France, one of the world's woodwind powerhouses, has a long tradition of nurturing wind musicians. In many parts of Europe, including northern France, coal miners once formed amateur brass and wind bands as a core part of their community life, Guyot explained, noting how these musical traditions helped embed a deep appreciation for wind instruments in the culture.
'So originally, wind instruments were popular instruments -- they were played for dancing, for parties, for funerals and even for military ceremonies," he said, explaining that today, woodwind instruments remain a popular choice in France, compared to the stronger preference for piano and string instruments often seen in Korea.
Throughout the festival, the four musicians will perform in different ensembles alongside other instrumentalists, culminating in a joint appearance for the quintet of Bizet's 'Carmen' in the closing performance on Sunday.
Launched in 2006 by renowned violinist Kang Dong-suk with support from the Seoul Metropolitan Government, the SSF emerged in a musical landscape that lacked long-term, stable platforms for chamber music.
gypark@heraldcorp.com
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Korea Herald
14 hours ago
- Korea Herald
Mourning in waterdrops: Kim Tschang-yeul's art chronicled at MMCA
Korean art master Kim Tschang-yeul is known for his paintings of waterdrops that appear as real as photographs — as if they might burst if touched — yet relatively little is known about his artistic journey. The retrospective "Kim Tschang-yeul" at the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Korea reveals the depth of the artist's fascination with waterdrops, following the artist's path from post-Korean War (1950-1953) to New York and France. Kim, born in South Pyeongan Province in today's North Korea, not only witnessed numerous deaths during the Korean War, but he also narrowly escaped death when a bullet passed right under his ear. The artist used to say 'surviving the war was a miracle,' according to Seol Won-ji, who curated the MMCA exhibition. The exhibition starts by showing the back of the painting 'Rite,' created in 1967. On the back of the canvas are the words 'Flesh and Spirit.' The painting, featuring rough brushstrokes and dark-toned colors reminiscent of tank tracks, is displayed in the space alongside other early works of the informel, or informalism, movement. 'For the artist, informel became a language for articulating his inner trauma. Certain works recall bullet holes tearing through flesh. Wounds and trauma from the war ultimately evolve into the motif of the waterdrops later on,' Seol said. For the first time, the museum collaborated with an overseas designer on spatial design; French designer Adrien Gardere, founder of Studio Adrien Gardere, worked with the MMCA curatorial team to visualize the storytelling. At the center of the space, surrounded by informel paintings, is a group of glass sculptures of waterdrops titled 'Ceremony." First created in 1993, it was recreated in 2025 for the exhibition, according to the museum. 'From the perspective of a designer, I felt it was important to persuade the curator that visitors should see images they are familiar with, while also conveying a storytelling element that anticipates how the artist's art might unfold,' Gardere said. Walking down the staircase to the basement, visitors follow Kim's journey to New York. He left for the city in 1965, following the recommendation of his mentor, artist Kim Whan-ki, and with the support of the Rockefeller Foundation. His works in New York take a different style from his earlier works, featuring geometric form. The change in his artistic style was perhaps inevitable; informel had lost its appeal in the city as new artistic movements such as pop art gained fame. 'The image of a geometric circle that emerged at this time becomes the symbolic key form in Kim Tschang-yeul's oeuvre,' Seol said. Exiting the room dedicated to the New York period, one encounters three paintings of a waterdrop in yellow, white and black hues. This space, set up like Kim's studio, sheds light on his time in France, where the artist started to develop the images of waterdrops into the iconic droplets for which he would become best known. 'The studio was a nearly 100-square-meter horse stable with a tiny heater that barely warmed the space. I crouched there like a monk, like a hermit, living no differently from someone in spiritual training. My state of mind was almost religious. 'That was where the 'waterdrop' was born. In that moment of deepest hardship — both financial and spiritual — the drop burst forth,' reads the artist's words displayed on a wall. In a dark room, waterdrops painted on linen or hanji, Korean mulberry paper, seem to flow or to be on the verge of flowing, offering viewers a moment of meditation. The exhibition continues on to the 'Recurrence' series, which was begun in the mid-1980s. This was when Kim began incorporating text into his paintings. He adapted "Cheonjamun," or the Thousand Character Primer, for his paintings by repeating the characters across the canvas with the waterdrops juxtaposed on the characters. The exhibition concludes with informel-like paintings on newspapers, created in his late years with yellow hues. These works are being shown to the public for the first time. Yellowish colors appear throughout his paintings, and the artist's color choices need to be further researched, the curator said. The show is the first retrospective to explore the late artist's work on a major scale, according to the museum. Kim died in 2021 at the age of 91, leaving the last words: "There are countless waterdrops I have yet to paint," according to the curator, quoting the bereaved family. The exhibition runs through Dec. 21.


Korea Herald
17 hours ago
- Korea Herald
Kep1er to hold first K-pop concert in China in 9 years, fueling hopes of easing Hallyu ban
Industry eyes potential easing of Beijing's Hallyu ban ahead of Xi Jinping's expected visit to Korea in October Expectations are growing in Korea's music industry that China may ease its yearslong ban on Korean entertainment, with Kep1er set to hold the first K-pop gig in mainland China in nine years, next month. The girl group, managed jointly by CJ ENM's music subsidiary WakeOne and Klap Entertainment, will perform in Fuzhou, Fujian Province, on Sept. 13. The group plans to present around 15 songs at the Fujian Meeting Hall, a venue that can hold up to 1,500 people. Klap Entertainment told The Korea Herald, however, that the show will be limited to about 1,000 attendees. According to Korean media reports Wednesday, the performance was officially approved in July by Fujian authorities, with the schedule listed on the Ministry of Culture and Tourism of the People's Republic of China's website. The outlet also cited a government notice stating the event would draw large crowds and therefore require cooperation from public security authorities. Kep1er debuted in early 2022 through Mnet's audition program 'Girls Planet 999.' The seven-member act includes one Chinese and one Japanese member, and has previously performed in Japan, Macao and Taiwan, giving it recognition overseas. The concert is drawing particular attention as it takes place two months before Chinese President Xi Jinping is expected to visit Korea for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit in late October — his first visit in 11 years. Industry interprets the timing as a sign that Beijing could begin to ease its restrictions on Hallyu, or the Korean Wave. China imposed an unofficial ban on Korean cultural content in 2016 in retaliation for Seoul's decision to deploy the US-led THAAD missile defense system. Since then, K-pop groups have been barred from staging concerts in the country, though fan meetings and pop-up stores have occasionally been allowed. Blackpink recently launched a large-scale pop-up tour in China, starting in Shanghai on Aug. 2 and extending to major cities including Shenzhen, Wuhan and Chengdu on Aug. 3 and Beijing on Aug. 5. Fans gathered at the shopping mall events, but no concerts were permitted. Industry watchers caution against assuming the ban has been fully lifted. In May, boy group EPEX announced a concert in Fuzhou — the same city where Kep1er will perform — only to cancel three weeks before the date. Korean indie band Say Sue Me also canceled a planned Beijing concert last July under similar circumstances. 'People in the industry are hopeful, especially with talk of Xi's visit later this year, that the restrictions could finally be lifted,' an executive at a major K-pop agency said. 'But the Chinese market remains unpredictable. Even if doors open, political issues could cause them to close again at any time.'


Korea Herald
20 hours ago
- Korea Herald
Korean DNA powers Amazon's spy thriller ‘Butterfly'
Actor-director Daniel Dae Kim says 'The show is like me' American spy thriller 'Butterfly,' which heralds Korean screen icon Kim Tae-hee's Hollywood debut, fuses Korean sensibilities with American storytelling. The series follows David Jung (Daniel Dae Kim), a former US intelligence operative who faked his death years ago and who now seeks to reconnect with his daughter Rebecca (Reina Hardesty), an assassin. Kim, who took on the dual roles of executive producer and lead actor for "Butterfly," described the show as a reflection of himself. 'I think the show is a little bit like me,' Kim said during a press conference in Yongsan-gu, Seoul, Thursday, describing the series as a hybrid of American blockbuster energy and a deeply personal Korean-rooted perspective. Reflecting on the series' dual heritage, Kim remarked on the production's commitment to Korean talent. 'Usually when American productions come here, they bring all their heads of staff from America and the only Korean people are the lower-level crew members. But here, for us, we did all of our heads of departments as Koreans because I felt that if we're going to tell a story in Korea with Koreans, then we need a Korean staff.' He added that the series explores subtle cultural nuances that neither "Korean Koreans" nor white Americans typically experience, using these small details to enrich the narrative. 'I wanted to talk about a lot of different things about what it felt like to be Asian, Asian-American and in Reinna's case, half-Asian,' he said. 'I felt like the way to do that was to talk about an American character coming back to a place where he looks the same but isn't quite the same as everybody else. And I like the idea that that parallels my own life because I was born in Busan but went to America when I was very young, but it never meant that Korea left my heart.' Kim also highlighted the timing for the series as crucial, noting the global popularity of Korean culture. 'Before, if we wanted to try to do this five or 10 years ago, I don't think there was as much interest in Korea. And so even though I would want to make this story, the studio wouldn't buy it. And so it was the right timing to tell a story that was very important to me.' For Kim Tae-hee, 'Butterfly' offered a fresh opportunity to explore a more grounded, everyday character. 'This particular project was especially fresh and new for me because it's a collaboration between Korea and the US. It felt like such a unique opportunity. On the other hand, the character I play here is, in a way, more ordinary and typical than any I've done before — it's just a regular Korean woman," said Kim Tae-hee. 'For me, being able to stand in front of the camera in an unstyled, natural way was a completely new experience. Personally, that felt very refreshing, though I'm not sure how viewers will perceive it," she added. 'Butterfly' premiered on Amazon Prime Video on Aug. 13 and airs on South Korea's tvN at 10:40 p.m. on Fridays.