Visual Nationalism and Communal Rituals: Park Saengkwang’s Art and Korean Shamanism

This paper analyzes Park Saengkwang (1904-1985)’s artwork, created in the 1980s and influenced by Musok, Korean Shamanism. It explores Musok’s thematic significance in the development of his distinctive style and the inspiration behind his stylistic changes. Park’s ink paintings are done in bold and...

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Autor principal: Shin, Seojeong (Author)
Tipo de documento: Recurso Electrónico Artigo
Idioma:Inglês
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Fernleihe:Fernleihe für die Fachinformationsdienste
Publicado em: David Publishing Company 2022
Em: Cultural and religious studies
Ano: 2022, Volume: 10, Número: 12, Páginas: 663-681
Outras palavras-chave:B Korean Shamanism
B Korean art and shamanism
B Twentieth Century Korean Art
B Korean colored ink painting
B visual nationalism
B Identity
B Park Saengkwang
B communal thoughts and rituals
Acesso em linha: Volltext (lizenzpflichtig)
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Descrição
Resumo:This paper analyzes Park Saengkwang (1904-1985)’s artwork, created in the 1980s and influenced by Musok, Korean Shamanism. It explores Musok’s thematic significance in the development of his distinctive style and the inspiration behind his stylistic changes. Park’s ink paintings are done in bold and intense colors and create an intriguing, mysterious mood, inviting the viewers to the primordial visual experience and exposing its viewers to Korean Shamanism, which has endured the perception that fluctuated between positive and negative throughout Korean history. The practice became a fitting cultural emblem associated with the national identity during the 1970s and 1980s, and thus became a way for Park to explicitly articulate his cultural roots, creating a visual connotation of "Korean." His art, portraying gut, Korean shamanistic communal rituals, could be conceived as a pictorial rendering of the idea of kibok, praying for good fortune, and served as a pujŏk, talisman paper, that possesses magical healing and protecting power. By striving to overcome the stylistic conflicts between Korean and Japanese, or traditional and Western, Park’s art accomplished the visual rhetoric of national aesthetic sensitivity that built on the communal thoughts and cultural experience of shamanism in the modern history of Korea.
ISSN:2328-2177
Obras secundárias:Enthalten in: Cultural and religious studies
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.17265/2328-2177/2022.12.001