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Samsung Art Store Unveils 20 Pieces From the Lee Kun-Hee Collection

Korea on December 18, 2025

Global users of Samsung’s The Frame, The Frame Pro and QLED models will have access to 20 masterpieces representing Korean art

Samsung Electronics and the National Museum of Korea today announced that they have made 20 carefully selected works from the late Samsung Chairman Lee Kun-Hee’s renowned art collection available on Samsung Art Store. A larger selection of the collection’s original pieces is currently on display at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Asian Art in Washington, D.C.

High-resolution digital versions of the selected works — representative masterpieces of Korean art — can be viewed on Samsung Art Store’s National Museum of Korea page. Through this initiative, Samsung and the National Museum of Korea aim to introduce the richness and excellence of traditional Korean art to Samsung consumers worldwide.

Samsung TVs Offer a Korean Art Masterpiece Experience in High-Resolution

The 20 artworks selected from the Lee Kun-Hee Collection are now viewable in stunning 4K resolution on Samsung TVs, offering users a vivid digital encounter with the masterpieces. A few featured works worth highlighting in Samsung Art Store include:

  • “Clearing After Rain on Mount Inwang” (National Treasure No. 216) – A representative example of true-view landscape painting
  • “Ten Symbols of Longevity” – A piece that symbolizes wishes for health and long life
  • “Sound of Autumn” – An autumnal-themed piece by Kim Hongdo, a leading painter of the Joseon Dynasty
  • “Sun, Moon, and Five Peaks” – A royal court painting symbolizing the Joseon monarchy

Additional works include “Banquet of King Yeongjo and Officials in Gyeonghyeondang Hall,” “Butterflies,” “Five Emperors of the Five Cardinal Directions,” “Four Underworld Messengers,” “The Flower Garland Sutra (Avatamsaka Sutra), Vol. 15,” “Scholar’s Accoutrements in a Bookcase,” “Gathering of Families with Multiple Generations of Government Service,” “Gudambong Peaks,” “Panels of a Man’s Ideal Life,” “Royal Banquet in the Imjin Year,” “Sea, Cranes, and Sacred Peaches,” “Tripitaka Bodhisattvas,” “Viewing the Capital From the Seobinggo Icehouse,” “The King Views the Dredging,” “Tiger and Magpie” and “Wrestling in the Afternoon,” all of which represent Korea’s artistic heritage.

Meanwhile, the National Museum of Korea is presenting the special exhibition “Korean Treasures: Collected, Cherished, Shared” at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Asian Art. The exhibition showcases carefully selected works from the late Chairman Lee’s donated collection that embody the essence of Korean art.

The exhibition features more than 200 works including seven National Treasures, spanning 1,500 years of Korean creativity. Notably, it is the largest special exhibition of Korean art held in North America in over 40 years, drawing significant attention across Washington, as well as other regions of the United States.

The National Museum of Korea plans to continue the international tour of the Lee Kun-Hee Collection with exhibitions at:

  • The Art Institute of Chicago (March–July 2026)
  • The British Museum (Sept. 2026–Jan. 2027)

The 20 works released on Samsung Art Store will remain available for public viewing until January 2027, when the international touring exhibitions conclude.

The Lee Family Continues the Late Chairman’s Legacy Through Cultural Contributions

“Even if collecting and preserving cultural heritage requires tremendous cost and time, I believe it is our duty to safeguard the future of our culture,” the late Chairman Lee once stated, demonstrating his devotion to cultural preservation.

Inheriting this philosophy of cultural contribution, Samsung Electronics Executive Chairman Jay Y. Lee and other members of the Lee family donated more than 23,000 artworks from the late Chairman’s lifelong personal collection in April 2021 to institutions such as the National Museum of Korea and the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art.

Since then, the Lee Kun-Hee Collection has toured museums around Korea, sparking widespread public interest in historical Korean art. It has been widely credited with expanding public access to culture and elevating the stature of Korea’s museums. Now, it is reaching global audiences through digital and physical exhibitions.

Samsung Art Store: High-Resolution Access to Collections From World-Class Museums

Available to users of Samsung’s The Frame, The Frame Pro and QLED models, Samsung Art Store is a subscription-based art service exclusively for Samsung TVs. More than 4,000 artworks in 4K resolution from over 50 renowned museums — including the Louvre, Musée d’Orsay, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Art Institute of Chicago and Tate — as well as works by hundreds of artists worldwide, are available on Samsung Art Store. The service offers Samsung TV users in 117 countries a gallery-like viewing experience at home. Since 2024, Samsung has also served as the official display partner of Art Basel, the world’s largest art fair, showcasing works by contemporary artists featured at Art Basel through Samsung Art Store.

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