STAR-CROSSED RENDEZVOUS: THE MUSICAL LEGACY OF ISANG YUN
L to R: Joy H. Calico, Photo courtesy of Vanderbilt University; Ryan Dohoney, Photo by Bruce Powell; Texu Kim, Photo by Bonsook Koo; Jung-Min “Mina” Lee, Photo by Kyujin Oh; Anne C. Shreffler, Photo by Mary Schneidau; Haegue Yang, Photo by Cheongjin Keem.

STAR-CROSSED RENDEZVOUS: THE MUSICAL LEGACY OF ISANG YUN

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.

LIST

STAR-CROSSED RENDEZVOUS: THE MUSICAL LEGACY OF ISANG YUN
A SYMPOSIUM ORGANIZED BY HAEGUE YANG AND MOCA

SCHEDULE OF EVENTS:
November 22, 2025, 11am – 5pm
MOCA Grand Avenue

Admission: Free, advance registration recommended. Attendees may join any or all sections, and are encouraged to RSVP.

11 am:  Introduction by Clara Kim and Haegue Yang, artist

11:30 am–12:30 pm: Keynote presentations by Ryan Dohoney and Mina Lee

2 pm: Heinz Holliger on Isang Yun

2:15–3:15 pm: Performances by Musicians from the Colburn School

Isang Yun, Königliches Thema for solo violin (1976)
Performed by violinist Amelia Sze

Isang Yun, Contemplation for two violas (1988)
Performed by violists Lan Cao and Yi-Chia Chen

Isang Yun, Glissées for solo cello (1970)
Performed by Jakob Taylor, cello

Isang Yun, Images for flute, oboe, violin and cello (1968)
Performed by Eric Bergemen, flute; Yeji Cho, oboe; Whitney Takata, violin; and Serge Kalinovsky, cello

3:30–5 pm: Panel Discussion with Ryan Dohoney, Texu Kim, Mina Lee, and Anne C. Shreffler, moderated by Joy Calico

WHO

SPEAKER BIOGRAPHIES

Joy H. Calico is Professor of Musicology and chair of the Department of Musicology at UCLA’s Herb Alpert School of Music. She is primarily interested in interdisciplinary questions of Cold War cultural politics, opera since 1900, and Arnold Schoenberg. She is the author of Brecht at the Opera and Arnold Schoenberg’s ‘A Survivor from Warsaw’ in Postwar Europe, both published by University of California Press, and co-editor with Daniel Chua of the California Studies in Global Musicology book series. Calico is a member of the Villa Aurora Thomas Mann Haus Advisory Council, and has served on its composition jury.

Ryan Dohoney is a scholar of U.S. and European modernism and experimentalism in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. His research documents the aesthetic and emotional relationships produced by musical performance and artistic collaboration within interdisciplinary artistic communities. He serves as Professor of Musicology and Associate Dean for Faculty in the Bienen School of Music at Northwestern University. There he is also core faculty in the programs in Critical Theory and Comparative Literary Studies. He received his PhD from Columbia University under the supervision of George E. Lewis. He received his Bachelor of Music in voice and music history at Rice University. He is the author of Saving Abstraction: Morton Feldman, the de Menils, and the Rothko Chapel(Oxford 2019) and Morton Feldman: Friendship and Mourning in the New York Avant-Garde (Bloomsbury Academic 2022). His research has been supported by fellowships and grants from the American Council of Learned Societies, the American Philosophical Society, the Paul Sacher Foundation, and the Kaplan Institute for the Humanities. He is also a vocalist working closely with the Wandelweiser experimental music collective.

Texu Kim (김택수) transforms unconventional sources — from everyday encounters to overlooked human stories — into sophisticated, culturally grounded works infused with clarity, wit, and nuance. His music has been performed by the New York Philharmonic, LA Phil, San Francisco Symphony, San Francisco Opera, Seoul Philharmonic, and Ensemble Modern, and presented at the Tongyeong International Music Festival, among others. Winner of the 2021 Barlow Prize, he has also earned honors from the Fromm Foundation, Civitella Ranieri Foundation, and Isang Yun Foundation. He has served as Composer-in-Residence of the Korean National Symphony Orchestra and is an associate professor at San Diego State University.

Jung-Min “Mina” Lee, a native of Seoul, is a musicologist specializing in 20th- and 21st-century music with a focus on Korean and East Asian composers and the Darmstadt avant-garde. Her research explores how music travels across borders through performers, institutions, and ideas, drawing on postcolonial and globalization studies. She has written on topics ranging from the politics of musical life in Korea and the stylistic history of K-pop to artificial intelligence and composition. Her work has appeared in journals and edited volumes, including Twentieth-Century Music, Music and Politics, The Cambridge Companion to K-pop, and Digital Revolution and Music (in Korean). Her first monograph, Creating a Korean Avant-Garde: Music and Diaspora from Isang Yun to Unsuk Chin (under contract with Cambridge University Press), examines five composers whose careers, shaped by diasporic trajectories and transnational networks, transformed the course of modern music in Korea. Her research has been supported by the Academy of Korean Studies and the Association for Asian Studies, among others. In addition to presenting at major U.S. and international conferences, she has reached public audiences through program notes for orchestras and ensembles nationwide. She is currently professor of music history at The Juilliard School in New York City.

Anne C. Shreffler is interested in how music history is written (and rewritten), with special emphasis on the political and ideological associations of music, institutions of new music, women creators, and global musicology. She has published on the musical avant-garde in Europe and America, historiography, composers in emigration, performance theory, and contemporary opera, as well as on the music of Anton Webern, Igor Stravinsky, Elliott Carter, John Corigliano, Bruno Maderna, and Younghi Pagh-Paan. She is currently working on a book, A Very Short Introduction to New Music (Oxford University Press). A proud 1975 graduate of the High School for Performing and Visual Arts in Houston, TX, Shreffler studied flute and music theory at New England Conservatory and received her Ph.D. in musicology from Harvard in 1989. She then taught at the University of Chicago and, from 1994 until 2003, University of Basel in Switzerland. She has taught at Harvard since the fall of 2003, where she is the James Edward Ditson Professor of Music and an Affiliate of the Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures.

Haegue Yang (b. 1971, Seoul) seeks to communicate without language in a primordial and visual way: often complementing her vocabulary of visual abstraction with sensory experiences that include scent, sound, light and tactility. Combining industrial fabrication and folk craftsmanship, Yang explores the affective power of materials in destabilizing the distinction between the modern and pre-modern. Yang’s unique visual language extends across various media (from paper collage to staging projects and performative sculptures), and materials (venetian blinds, clothing racks, synthetic straw, bells and graph paper) that are torn, lacquered, woven, lit and hung. Her artistic explorations stem from material-based concerns and evolve to span philosophical, political and emotionally charged readings of historical events and figures. Her ongoing research is empowered by underlying references to art history, literature and political history, through which she re-interprets some of her recurrent themes: migration, postcolonial diasporas, enforced exile and social mobility. As a result, these pieces link various geopolitical contexts and histories in an attempt to understand and comment on our own time. Yang’s translation from the political and historical into the formal and abstract, demonstrates her conviction that historical narratives can be made comprehensible without being linguistically explanatory or didactic. Yang lives and works in Berlin and Seoul.

 


 

About Haegue Yang: Star-Crossed Rendezvous
On view March 1, 2026
MOCA Grand Avenue

A unique collaboration between The Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA) and the Los Angeles Philharmonic, this presentation brings together the work of internationally acclaimed visual artist Haegue Yang (b. 1971, Seoul) and her interest in and engagement with the late composer Isang Yun (1917–1995). The institutional collaboration unfolds over two distinct presentations: an exhibition featuring a sprawling installation Star-Crossed Rendezvous after Yun, 2024, at MOCA Grand Avenue, for its U.S. debut; and a concert at the Walt Disney Concert Hall for a special one evening performance of Yun’s Double Concerto (1977), by the LA Philharmonic on March 10, 2026. This project bridges two distinguished cultural organizations and their unique architectural sites, connecting them through time and space, with this immersive sonic and visual experience.

Haegue Yang: Star-Crossed Rendezvous, on view March 1, 2026 at MOCA Grand Avenue, is organized by Paula Kroll, Assistant Curator, with Clara Kim, Chief Curator & Director of Curatorial Affairs, The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.

ABOUT THE MUSEUM OF CONTEMPORARY ART
Founded in 1979, MOCA is the defining museum of contemporary art. In a relatively short period of time, MOCA has achieved astonishing growth; a world-class permanent collection of almost 8,000 objects, international in scope and among the finest in the world; hallmark education programs that are widely emulated; award-winning publications that present original scholarship; groundbreaking monographic, touring, and thematic exhibitions of international repute that survey the art of our time; and cutting-edge engagement with modes of new media production. MOCA is a not-for-profit institution that relies on a variety of funding sources for its activities.

For more information, call 213-626-6222 or visit MOCA online at moca.org for details on current exhibitions, education programs, and special events.

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