ARTFEED — Contemporary Art Intelligence

Harmony Korine's Second Exhibition at Galerie du Jour

exhibition · 2026-04-23

Harmony Korine, known for his film work including the screenplay for Larry Clark's 'Kids' and directing 'Gummo' and 'Julien Donkey-Boy' (the first American Dogme 95 film), presented his second exhibition at Galerie du Jour in Paris from May 28 to July 5, 2003. The show featured collages, photographs, and text works that explore the real and its representation. Korine's practice involves sampling, détournement, and mirroring, as seen in works like 'Sans Titre – Death in Venise' (1994) with repeated female faces, and photographs of Macaulay Culkin ('Bad Son', 'Yellow Son', 'Color Son'). He also collaborated with Christopher Wool on pieces referencing swastikas and KKK. The exhibition interrogates perception, distance, and the origin of meaning through juxtaposed fragments from diverse sources including websites, children's imagery, comics, and literature.

Key facts

  • Harmony Korine's second exhibition at Galerie du Jour in Paris
  • Exhibition dates: May 28 to July 5, 2003
  • Korine wrote the screenplay for Larry Clark's 'Kids' (1994)
  • Directed 'Gummo' and 'Julien Donkey-Boy'
  • 'Julien Donkey-Boy' was the first American Dogme 95 film
  • Show includes collages, photographs, and text works
  • Features photographs of Macaulay Culkin titled 'Bad Son', 'Yellow Son', 'Color Son'
  • Collaborated with Christopher Wool on works referencing swastikas and KKK

Entities

Artists

  • Harmony Korine
  • Larry Clark
  • Thomas Vinterberg
  • Lars von Trier
  • Macaulay Culkin
  • Christopher Wool

Institutions

  • Galerie du Jour
  • Dogme 95

Locations

  • Paris
  • France

Sources