Kim jung san biography of donald

  • Kim han-sol
  • Kim jong un
  • Kim jong-nam
  •  

    Solo Exhibitions

    2023Gye Hang Museum
    Incheon, Korea
    "Invitational Solo Exhibition"
    Arundel Center
    Annapolis, MD
    "Returned Heroes"
    Goodwin House
    Alexandria, VA
    "Island"
     
    2022Paris Koh Fine Arts
    Fort Lee, NJ
    "Living Organism"
    Bank of Hope
    New York, NY
    "Island"
    MC3, Maryland Conference and Culture Center
    Annapolis, MD
    "Island"
     
    2021Maryland Federation of Art
    Annapolis, MD
    "Born Heroes"
     
    2019Carroll Museum
    Baltimore, MD
    "Camouflage"
    Rachel M Schlesinger Concert Hall & Art Center, Northern Virginia Community College
    Alexandria, VA
    "The One"
    Aurora Hills Community Center/Library
    Arlington, VA
    "Sanctuary"
     
    2018Annapolis City Hall
    Annapolis, MD
    "The new homeland"
    Tong Lau Space Artist Residency Project, Hong Kong: love it! (Two-person)
    Tong Lau
  • kim jung san biography of donald
  • Kim Il Sung

    Leader of North Korea from 1948 to 1994

    In this Korean name, the family name is Kim.

    Eternal President

    Kim Il Sung

    Official portrait, 1966

    In office
    12 October 1966 – 8 July 1994
    Secretary
    Preceded byHimself (as Chairman)
    Succeeded byKim Jong Il
    In office
    28 December 1972 – 8 July 1994
    Premier
    Vice President
    Preceded byOffice established[a]
    Succeeded byOffice abolished[b][c]
    In office
    14 December 1962 – 8 July 1994
    Preceded byOffice established
    Succeeded byKim Jong Il
    In office
    24 June 1949 – 12 October 1966
    Vice Chairman
    Preceded byKim Tu-bong
    Succeeded byHimself (as General Secretary)
    In office
    9 September 1948 – 28 December 1972
    President
    First Vice PremierKim Il
    Vice Premier
    Preceded byOffice established
    Succeeded byKim Il
    In office
    5 July 1950 – 24 December

    North Korean leader Kim Jong Un continues to accelerate the country’s nuclear weapons and ballistic missile programs. At the same time, North Korea has been a key supplier of arms to Russia as the war in Ukraine progresses. Both of these actions are critical threats to South Korea, the United States, and Japan. But the outside world is missing an equally important development with immense implications for stability on the Korean Peninsula—the slow and irreversible breakdown of the Kim dynasty.

    That said, regime collapse is not necessarily around the corner. When North Korea’s founding dictator Kim Il Sung died in July 1994, predictions were rampant about regime or state collapse. When his son and successor Kim Jong Il died in December 2011, many North Korea experts thought that then twenty-seven-year-old Kim Jong Un—Kim Jong Il’s youngest son—would not be able to stay in power. It has been thirteen years since Kim Jong Un succeeded his father, and he remains in firm control over No