A SYMPOSIUM ORGANIZED BY HAEGUE YANG AND MOCA
Los Angeles, CA—In anticipation of the forthcoming exhibition Haegue Yang: Star-Crossed Rendezvous (on view March 1, 2026 at MOCA Grand Avenue) and a companion concert by the Los Angeles Philharmonic (March 10, 2026 at Walt Disney Concert Hall), The Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) presents Star-Crossed Rendezvous: The Musical Legacy of Isang Yun, a symposium exploring the life and influence of the pioneering Korean-German composer Isang Yun. This day-long symposium, taking place on November 22, 2025 at MOCA Grand Avenue, is co-organized by MOCA in partnership with artist Haegue Yang.
Haegue Yang (b. 1971, Seoul) is celebrated for her distinctive abstract visual language, often articulated through structures made of venetian blinds and accompanied by choreographed sequences of light and movement that heighten sensory experience. Over the past decade, Yang has devoted herself to exploring the musical and political legacy of Isang Yun (1917–1995) through extensive archival and artistic research. Star-Crossed RendezvousAfter Yun (2024) marks a major breakthrough in this sustained engagement, which will be shown for the first time in North America in March 2026 at MOCA. Sharing its title with the work, Star-Crossed Rendezvous: The Musical Legacy of Isang Yun brings together esteemed musicologists, historians, composers, and musicians to reflect on Yun’s enduring influence as a pivotal figure in the history of avant-garde classical music.
Born in Korea, Isang Yun emigrated to Europe in the late 1950s, first moving to Paris before settling in Berlin. His music embodies a profoundly diasporic perspective, merging Western academic traditions with Korean musical techniques, ancient iconography, and mythologies. In Berlin, Yun studied at the Hochschule für Musik under Boris Blacher and musicologist Josef Rufer, a disciple of Arnold Schoenberg, whose writings on serialism deeply influenced Yun’s thinking. He soon became acquainted with John Cage and other leading figures of the European avant-garde through the pivotal experimental gatherings at Donaueschinger Musiktage and Darmstädter Ferienkurse (Darmstadt Summer Courses), where his compositions began to attract significant attention and his distinct musical voice took form.
Over his lifetime, Yun composed more than 120 works—from chamber pieces to operas and symphonies—that embraced dissonance, lyrical expansiveness, and a distinctive “Hauptton” technique: a personal adaptation of Korean court music filtered through Schoenberg’s twelve-tone system. His compositions fuse the meditative sensibility of East Asian philosophy with Western modernism, translating traditional performance gestures into the language of Western instruments.
Yun’s artistic evolution unfolded amid the major political upheavals of the twentieth century: the Japanese colonization of Korea, liberation and division after World War II, the Korean War, and the Cold War. In 1967, he was abducted and imprisoned by the South Korean authoritarian regime in the East Berlin Affair, also known as the Dongbaekrim Incident, in which Korean expatriates, including students, intellectuals, and artists, primarily living in Europe, were targeted and accused of spying for North Korea. The international music community—led by Igor Stravinsky and Herbert von Karajan—petitioned successfully for Yun’s release. Weakened by the harsh conditions of imprisonment and torture, Yun returned to Germany in 1969 and obtained German citizenship in 1971. Until his death, he remained deeply devoted to his compositional practice, pedagogical legacy, and his political engagement, advocating for democracy in South Korea and the reunification of the Korean Peninsula. Without ever returning to his homeland, Yun left behind a legacy that bridges continents, philosophies, and histories.
This symposium is the first academic convening devoted to Isang Yun in North America, bringing his work to new audiences in Los Angeles and marking an increased interest in the transnational, diasporic figure. In addition to keynote presentations and a panel discussion, musicians from the Colburn School will perform four pieces of Yun’s music: Images (1968), Glissées (1970), Königliches Thema (1976), and Contemplation (1988). On the occasion of this symposium, esteemed Swiss composer, oboist, and conductor Heinz Holliger will offer a video tribute to Isang Yun, an endearing salutation for the symposium audience that was recorded in Zurich in September 2025. Holliger and Yun were close friends and Yun’s 1977 Double Concerto is dedicated to Holliger and his late wife, Ursula Holliger, a celebrated harpist.
“MOCA is thrilled to be hosting Haegue Yang for this unprecedented collaboration between MOCA and LA Phil—bridging time, history and artistic forms. Isang Yun’s radical compositions and life trajectory during the tumultuous decades of the Cold War are a testament to the enduring power of art and music, as well as its transgressive possibilities. The symposium will be an opportunity to bring Los Angeles audiences closer to Yun’s indelible contributions through Yang’s sustained interest and engagement with this figure,” said Clara Kim, Chief Curator & Director of Curatorial Affairs at MOCA.
On March 10, 2026, MOCA and the Los Angeles Philharmonic will collaborate to present Yang’s multi-sensorial installation Star-Crossed Rendezvous after Yun, 2024 at MOCA and a concert of Isang Yun’s Double Concerto (1977) at Walt Disney Concert Hall.
The symposium Star-Crossed Rendezvous: The Musical Legacy of Isang Yun was co-organized by artist Haegue Yang; Clara Kim, Chief Curator and Director of Curatorial Affairs; and Paula Kroll, Assistant Curator, with Michele Huizar, Performance Coordinator, The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.