Korean painting includes paintings made in Korea or by overseas Koreans on all surfaces. It includes art as old as the petroglyphs through post-modern conceptual art using transient forms of light. Calligraphy rarely occurs in oil paintings and is dealt with in the brushwork entry, Korean calligraphy. Calligraphy (from Greek kallos "beauty" + graphẽ "writing" is the art of writing (Mediavilla 1996 17 The art of Calligraphy is widely practiced and revered in the East Asian Civilizations that use or used Chinese characters.
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Generally the history of Korean painting is dated to approximately 108 C. Shin Yun-bok, better known by his pen name Hyewon, (b 1758 was a Korean painter of the Joseon Dynasty. E. , when it first appears as an independent form. Between that time and the paintings and frescoes that appear on the Goryeo dynasty tombs, there has been little research. The Goryeo Dynasty ( 918 - 1392) (also spelled Koryŏ was a Sovereign state established in 918 by Taejo Wang Kon. Suffice to say that til the Joseon dynasty the primary influence was Chinese painting though done with Korean landscapes, facial features, Buddhist topics, and an emphasis on celestial observation in keeping with the rapid development of Korean astronomy. China ( Wade-Giles ( Mandarin) Chung¹kuo² is a cultural region, an ancient Civilization, and depending on perspective a National
Throughout the history of Korean painting, there has been a constant separation of monochromatic works of black brushwork on very often mulberry paper or silk; and the colourful folk art or min-hwa, ritual arts, tomb paintings, and festival arts which had extensive use of colour.
This distinction was often class-based: scholars, particularly in Confucian art felt that one could see colour in monochromatic paintings within the gradations and felt that the actual use of colour coarsened the paintings, and restricted the imagination. Confucian art is art inspired by the writings of Confucius, and Confucian teachings Korean folk art, and painting of architectural frames was seen as brightening certain outside wood frames, and again within the tradition of Chinese architecture, and the early Buddhist influences of profuse rich thalo and primary colours inspired by Art of India. The vast scope of the art of India intertwines with the cultural history religions and philosophies which place art production and patronage in social and cultural contexts
Korean painters in the post-1945 period have assimilated some of the approaches of the west. Certain European artists with thick impasto technique and foregrounded brushstrokes captured the Korean interest first. In English the borrowed Italian word impasto most commonly refers to a technique used in Painting, where Paint is laid on an area of the surface (or the entire Such artists as Gauguin, Monticelli, Van Gogh, Cezanne, Pissarro, and Braque have been highly influential as they have been the most taught in art schools, with books both readily available and translated into Korean early. Eugène Henri Paul Gauguin (7 June 1848 – 8 May 1903 was a leading Post-Impressionist painter. Adolphe Joseph Thomas Monticelli ( October 14 1824 – June 29 1886) was a French painter of the generation preceding the Camille Pissarro ( July 10 1830 &ndash November 13 1903) was a French Impressionist painter. Georges Braque ( May 13, 1882 &ndash August 31, 1963) was a major 20th century French painter and sculptor And from these have been drawn the tonal palettes of modern Korean artists: yellow ochre, cadmium yellow, Naples yellow, red earth, and sienna. All thickly painted, roughly stroked, and often showing heavily textured canvases or thick pebbled handmade papers.
Elements that are central to Korean painting have been copied in slightly larger sizes by such western artists as Julian Schnabel who paint in what appears to be large chunks of smashed ceramics: a Korean style. Julian Schnabel (born 26 October 1951) is a American Artist and Filmmaker. And who appear to have been influenced by the Korean approach to translating a rich ceramic heritage into the brush-strokes of oil painting.
Colour theory has been used over formal perspective, and there has yet to be an overlap between painterly art and pop-graphics, since the primary influence on painters is ceramics art.
The expected genres of Buddhist art showing the Buddha, or Buddhist monks, and Confucian art of scholars in repose, or studying in quiet often mountainous surroundings follows general Asian art trends. Buddhist art originated on the Indian subcontinent following the historical life of Gautama Buddha, 6th to 5th century BCE and thereafter evolved by contact with Confucian art is art inspired by the writings of Confucius, and Confucian teachings
Buddhas tend to have Korean facial features, and are in easy resting positions. Nimbus colours are not necessarily gold, and may be suggested by lighter colours. Faces tend to realism and show humanity and age. Drapery is done with some to great care. The face is generally two-dimensional, the drapery three-dimensional. As in medieval and renaissance western art, drapery and faces are done often by two or three artists who specialize in one particular painterly skill. Iconography follows Buddhist iconography.
Scholars tend to have the traditional stove-pipe hats, or other rank hats, and scholar's monochromatic robes. Typically they are at rest in teahouses near mountains or at mountain lodges, or will be pictured with their teachers or mentors.
Hunting scenes, familiar throughout the entire world, are often seen in Korean courtly art, and are reminiscent of Mongolian and Persian hunting scenes. Wild boar, deer, and stags, and sadly Siberian tigers as well were hunted. Particularly lethal spears and spear-handled maces were used by horsemen within hunting grounds after archers on the ground led the initial provocation of the animals as beaters.
Goguryeo art, preserved largely in tomb paintings, is noted for the vigour of its imagery. Goguryeo art is the art of Goguryeo, an ancient kingdom ( 37 BC &ndash 668) which occupied large areas of present-day China and Korea Finely detailed art can be seen in Goguryeo tombs and other murals. Many of the art pieces has an original style of painting.
Goruryeo tomb murals date from around AD 500 during the Goguryeo period, 37 BC-AD 668. The Complex of Goguryeo Tombs lies in North Korea. In July 2004 it became the first UNESCO World Heritage site in the country These magnificent, still strongly colored murals show daily life and Korean mythologies of the time. By 2005, 70 murals had been found, mostly in the Taedong river basin near Pyongyang, the Anak area in South Hwanghae province. The Taedong River is a large river in North Korea. It rises in the Rangrim Mountains of the country's north Pyongyang (pʰjʌŋjaŋ is the Capital and largest City of North Korea, located on the Taedong River, at. South Hwanghae ( Hwanghae-namdo) is a province of North Korea. The murals of Horyu Temple, which are considered as treasures in Japan, were painted by the Goguryeo monk, Damjing. Damjing was a Buddhist priest who imported the first paper to Japan from Goguryeo in Korea around 610, where fibres (called bast) from the
During the Goryeo dynasty exceptionally beautiful paintings were produced in the service of Buddhism; paintings of the bodhisattva Avalokiteshvara (Korean: Gwaneum Bosal) are especially noted for their elegance and spirituality.
Yi Nyeong and Yi Je-hyeon are considered significant Goryeo artists outside of the Buddhist tradition.
The influence of Confucianism superseded that of Buddhism in this period, however Buddhist elements remained and it is not true that Buddhist art declined, it continued, and was encouraged but not by the imperial centres of art, or the accepted taste of the Joseon Dynasty publicly; however in private homes, and indeed in the summer palaces of the Joseon Dynasty kings, the simplicity of Buddhist art was given great appreciation - but it was not seen as citified art.
While the Joseon Dynasty began under military auspices, Goreyo styles were let to evolve, and Buddhist iconography (bamboo, orchid, plum and chrysanthemum; and the familiar knotted goodluck symbols) were still a part of genre paintings. Neither colours nor forms had any real change, and rulers stood aside from edicts on art. Ming ideals and imported techniques continued in early dynasty idealized works.
Early dynasty painters include:
Mid-dynasty painting styles moved towards increased realism. A national painting style of landscapes called "true view" began - moving from the traditional Chinese style of idealized general landscapes to particular locations exactly rendered. While not photographic, the style was academic enough to become established and supported as a standardized style in Korean painting.
Mid-dynasty painters include:
The mid to late Joseon dynasty is considered the golden age of Korean painting. It coincides with the shock of the collapse of Ming dynasty links with the Manchu emperors accession in China, and the forcing of Korean artists to build new artistic models based on nationalism and an inner search for particular Korean subjects. At this time China ceased to have pre-eminent influence, Korean art took its own course, and became increasingly distinctive.
The list of major painters is long, but the most notable names include:
What calligraphy used is often discreetly done.
Other important artists of the "literati school" include:
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Ahn Gyeon (?-?), A Dream of Amusement in the Garden of Peach Blossoms, 1447, Tenri University Central Library. Kang Sehwang (1713 - 1791 was a not only a high government official but also a representative painter and calligrapher and art critic of the mid Joseon period. |
Yi Ahm (1499-?), Mother Dog, 15th century, National Museum of Korea. |
Jeong Seon (1676-1759), A View of Geumgang, 1734, Hoam Gallery. Jeong Seon (1676–1759 was a well-known Korean landscape painter also known as by his pen name Gyeomjae (meaning humble study) |
Kim Hong-do (1745-?), Two Men Wrestle, 18th century, National Museum of Korea. Kim Hongdo, better known as Danwon (1745&ndashc 1806 was a painter of the late Joseon period. |
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Kim Hong-do, A Cat and a Butterfly, 18th century, Gansong Art Gallery. |
Shin Yun-bok (1758-?), A Boat Ride, 1805, Gansong Art Gallery. Shin Yun-bok, better known by his pen name Hyewon, (b 1758 was a Korean painter of the Joseon Dynasty. |
Jo Hee-ryong (1797-1859), A House amongst Apricot Trees, Gansong Art Gallery. |
Korean artists from the middle 1880s til 1945, when Korea was freed by the allies after the unconditional surrender of Japan, had a very difficult time.
From the 1880s onward, the Japanese invaders of Korea attempted both to obliterate and eliminate Korean art itself through looting and destruction of Korean artistic works, and continued as they closed Korean schools of art, torched Korean paintings of Korean subjects, and forced those few artists left to paint Japanese subjects in Japanese styles and so seed Japanese art as the art of the Koreas forever.
To this date there has not been a retrospective show of the hidden art under Japanese occupation, or a discussion of the conflicts between those who were forced into compromise under Japanese artistic demands. It is an issue of great sensitivity, with artists who studied and worked in Japan and painted in the Japanese style forced into self-defense and justification of compromise without other alternatives.
Bridging the late Joseon dynasty and the Japanese occupation period were noteworthy artists such as:
and others.