Ji-Min Park
Born in Seoul, South Korea, Ji-Min Park lives and works in Paris. A graduate of ENSAD, she is a multidisciplinary visual artist who explores the complexity and fluidity of intersecting identities, highlighting tensions, paradoxes, and encounters between the natural and the artificial, the spiritual and the material, beauty and ugliness, life and death, tenderness and harshness, fragility and stability, abstraction and figuration, love and hate. Her work has been exhibited at the Frac Corse, La Villette, the Salon de Montrouge, the Peace Museum in Seoul, Frac Nouvelle-Aquitaine MÉCA, and the Ateliers Mommen in Brussels. In June 2026, she will present a solo exhibition at Galerie Pony in Montreuil.
In 2021, Ji-Min Park met director Davy Chou, with whom she worked on the preparation of his feature film Return to Seoul. This first cinematic experience opened new horizons for her: Return to Seoul was presented in the Un Certain Regard section at the 2022 Cannes Film Festival, and led to Ji-Min being named among the César Revelations in 2024. Since then, she has continued a series of collaborations, notably with José Caltagirone and Valentine Milville on the series La Maison (broadcast on Apple TV), as well as with Anna Cazenave Cambet on her feature film Love Me Tender (Un Certain Regard at the 2025 Cannes Film Festival) and Rebecca Zlotowski on Private Life (Official Selection, Out of Competition, the same year). She plays the second lead role in La Petite Dernière, the new film by Hafsia Herzi, presented in Official Competition at Cannes alongside Nadia Melliti. For this performance, she was nominated for Best Supporting Actress at the 2026 César Awards. Ji-Min recently collaborated with director Christophe Honoré on his upcoming feature film Un mariage au goût d’orange.