10 Ghost Studio Stars Just Made Jeonju Unforgettable

Ghost Studio partners with Dazed Korea and the 27th Jeonju International Film Festival for a cinematic ten-actor editorial

|6 min read0
Han Sun-hwa, Ghost Studio actress and one of 10 stars participating in the 27th Jeonju International Film Festival Dazed Korea editorial
Han Sun-hwa, Ghost Studio actress and one of 10 stars participating in the 27th Jeonju International Film Festival Dazed Korea editorial

Ten of Korea's most respected actors gathered in Jeonju this week for something that blends fashion, cinema, and festival spirit into a single memorable frame. Ghost Studio, the management agency behind some of the country's finest dramatic talent, has partnered with Dazed Korea on a special editorial for the magazine's May issue — shot entirely in Jeonju to celebrate the opening of the 27th Jeonju International Film Festival.

The editorial, released on April 29, features Joo Won, Kwon Na-ra, Han Sun-hwa, Kim Sung-oh, Ryu Kyung-soo, Go Won-hee, Lee I-dam, Lee Hyo-je, Jung Ha-dam, and Heo Joon-seok. Across ten portraits and ensemble shots, the actors explore a concept the production team describes as living freely between life on screen and life off it — a fitting theme for a group of performers whose professional identities are inseparable from the stories they tell.

The collaboration was announced as part of the Jeonju X Majeung (전주X마중) program, a special initiative that connects Ghost Studio's actor roster with the Jeonju International Film Festival and invites them to engage directly with audiences throughout the event. It is one of the more ambitious agency-festival partnerships Korea's entertainment industry has seen this season, combining editorial fashion, live programming, and a physical exhibition into a single cohesive campaign.

Palbok Art Factory as the Backdrop

The photoshoot was staged at Palbok Art Factory, a cultural landmark in Jeonju known for its repurposed industrial architecture and creative programming. Originally a paper mill, the building has been transformed into one of the city's most distinctive artistic spaces, and its raw textures and expansive interiors gave each actor room to express their individual energy while still contributing to a cohesive visual whole.

According to reports from the production team, the actors absorbed their individual concepts naturally and expressed their own personalities in ways that merged into something that feels like a scene from a film. That is exactly the kind of imagery Dazed Korea is known for — fashion as character study, photography as narrative — and the Ghost Studio roster proved especially well-suited to that approach.

The finished photographs will not only appear in the May edition of Dazed Korea but will also be exhibited at the Jeonju Film Studio (전주영화제작소) throughout the festival period, giving visitors an additional reason to explore the broader cultural footprint of this year's event beyond its screening venues. The photo exhibition transforms the editorial into a piece of the festival itself, rather than just a promotional tie-in.

Who Is in the Frame

The ten actors that Ghost Studio brought to Jeonju represent a wide and impressive spectrum of Korean television and film. Joo Won, perhaps best known internationally for the period dramas Baker King Kim Tak-goo and Bridal Mask (각시탈), is one of the most recognized faces from his generation of Korean actors and brings instant name recognition to the project. Kim Sung-oh has built a durable reputation across both arthouse and mainstream productions. Ryu Kyung-soo won wide audience attention for his scene-stealing work in the smash hit crime drama Vincenzo, while Kwon Na-ra has been praised for her range across projects in both Korea and the international co-production space.

Han Sun-hwa, who began her career as a member of the K-pop group Secret before transitioning fully to acting, has steadily established herself in drama through work including the fantasy thriller The Uncanny Counter. Go Won-hee, one of the most active and critically recognized young actresses currently working in Korean drama, was also selected as the opening ceremony MC for this year's Jeonju International Film Festival — a role that adds an extra layer of significance to her participation in the Ghost Studio editorial and speaks to the level of trust the festival places in her public presence.

Lee I-dam, Lee Hyo-je, Jung Ha-dam, and Heo Joon-seok round out the ten, each contributing to a collective identity that Ghost Studio has carefully cultivated: a roster defined not by any single genre or style, but by artistic depth, versatility, and consistent quality of performance.

The Festival Program and Audience Programming

The photoshoot is the visual centerpiece of a broader collaboration between Ghost Studio and the 27th Jeonju International Film Festival. Majeung is a Korean word meaning to go out and welcome someone — and the program captures that spirit of hospitality and connection between artists and their audiences. The festival opened on April 29 with a ceremony that featured Go Won-hee as host, and the Ghost Studio actors are scheduled to participate in programming throughout the run of the event.

The audience engagement programs include Majeung Class (마중클래스), a more intimate educational and conversational format, and Majeung Talk (마중토크), a public discussion series that brings actors into direct conversation with festivalgoers. These events are designed specifically to close the distance between screen talent and the audiences who follow their work, creating opportunities for the kind of candid exchange that rarely happens in a typical press environment.

The partnership also includes a digital collaboration with Meta, reflecting the festival's interest in extending its reach beyond the physical spaces of Jeonju. For a regional film festival that has spent more than two and a half decades earning international credibility, the combination of print editorial, physical exhibition, live programming, and digital engagement represents a significant expansion of how it frames its cultural partnerships.

Ghost Studio's Growing Cultural Presence

Ghost Studio manages one of the more eclectic rosters in Korean entertainment. In addition to the ten actors featured in the Dazed Korea editorial, the agency also represents Cha Ju-young, Cha Ji-hyeok, Chae Seo-jin, Hwang Jae-yeol, Jang Hee-ryeong, Im Jae-hyeok, Lee Da-hee, Eum Moon-suk, Oh Hyun-kyung, Eom Tae-woong, Lee Seon-ho, An Seo-hyeon, Song Sang-eun, Park Geon-il, Min Jin-woong, Ryu Seong-rok, Kim Yo-han, Kim Ok-vin, Kwon Hyeon-bin, and Kang Byul — a collective that spans decades of Korean television and film history.

For Ghost Studio, the Jeonju partnership is a clear statement about the kind of agency it is building. Beyond contract negotiations and project placements, it is positioning itself as a cultural participant — one that understands the most compelling stories about its actors happen not only in front of cameras on drama sets, but also in the spaces where art and daily life intersect. A fashion editorial at a film festival is, in that sense, exactly the kind of move that defines who Ghost Studio is becoming.

The Dazed Korea May special edition featuring the Ghost Studio editorial is available now. The exhibited photographs at Jeonju Film Studio will remain on display for audiences attending the 27th Jeonju International Film Festival. And for those who cannot make the trip to Jeonju, the images — cinematic, considered, and quietly magnetic — offer a window into what happens when ten gifted actors are given a storied city and asked to make it their own.

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저작권자 © KEnterHub 무단전재 및 재배포, AI학습 및 활용 금지

Park Chulwon
Park Chulwon

Entertainment Journalist · KEnterHub

Entertainment journalist focused on Korean music, film, and the global K-Wave. Reports on industry trends, celebrity profiles, and the intersection of Korean pop culture and international audiences.

K-PopK-DramaK-MovieKorean CelebritiesGlobal K-Wave

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