Painting on the canvas of Gwangju The
face of the city of Gwangju presents to us was not its original,
but rather has been transformed by the people who lived and who
still live in the city. The first thing about Gwangju that comes
to mind is the “home of the arts,” an image created
by Gwangju’s artists. The people who have remained on the
land and have not left despite many historical hardships are the
ones that created today’s Gwangju.
A living witness to Gwangju’s history is Kim Bong-ho, a local
resident who has written is diary every single day for the last
53 years. His diary is not just a record of his own daily life but
also an important piece of Gwangju’s history and society.
Through residents like Kim Bong-ho who have anonymously preserved
their hometown, Gwangju has been able to maintain its frame as a
home of the arts.
In
speaking of Gwangju as a home of the arts, there are certain names
that must be mentioned. Names like Huh Baek-tyun (artistic name
Ui-jae), master of Korean painting; O Ji-ho, who gave Western impressionism
a Korean flavor; and Im Bang-ul, the great singer of pansori narratives.
In some cases, the artistic spirit that raised Gwangju’s arts
to a peak was passed on to the next generation. O Ji-ho had a son
named O Syng-yoon who has remained in Gwangju as a Western-style
painter like his father. In the beautiful thatched house that his
father left him, O Syng-yoon paints natural Korean landscapes that
form an oeuvre of his own quite distinct from his father’s.
He depicts Korea’s mountains and seas using the “five
directional colors” of the Korean tradition: red, blue, yellow,
white, and black.
If
O Syng-yoon is a leader among the established artists of Gwangju,
an up-and-coming young artist is Kang Un. His canvases are devoted
to a single theme: clouds. He says it was an indolent disposition
that led him to restrict himself to clouds, in which all things
in the world were contained; but as the “Un” character
is his name means, “cloud”; painting clouds perhaps
his destiny. He is constantly striving to express his feeling trough
new perspectives and techniques, and today, once again he is painting
the beautiful sky of Jeollanam-do Province. 
The arts of Gwangju also include handicrafts using metal, paper,
and textiles. Non Eun-hee is a mixed –media artist who creates
her works from Korean paper colored with ink, ocher, and other traditional
Korean dyes. Her themes are traditional with multicolored children’s
clothing, wrapping cloths, lotuses, cranes, and deer, which she
transforms through a sophisticated sense of color and form. She
says it gives her a special pride to present oversees Korean works
made of Korean materials.
Gwangju is also famous as a home of traditional music and pansori
songs. Sung Sim-on, a designated preserver of Intangible Cultural
Property No. 23, Gayageum Sanjo in the style mof Kim Juk-pa, performs
intimate feminine melodies on the twelve-string zither gayageum.
With its body made of paulownia and chestnut wood and its string
of wound silk, the gayageum produces the subtle tine color of an
instrument made of natural materials. Sung brings out the delicate
vibrato of the gayageum to enrich the city of Gwangju with beautiful
light and sound.
The fragrance of art pervades the city
Huh
Baek-ryun, master of southern-style literati painting, played a
major role in making Gwangju the flourishing home of the arts that
it is today. He settled in Gwangju in 1938, living on the slope
of Mt Mudeungsan where he painted many masterpieces. The Uijae Art
Museum, located at the entrance to the Jeungsimsa Valley on Mt.
Mudeungsan, is where you can retrace Huh Baek-ryun’s footsteps.
You can see the building named Chunseolheon that was his studio
for 30 years, the Gwangpungdae he used as a meeting place, the tea
garden that he loved and decorated, and the museum where his original
works are on display. Walking in the steps of Hun Baek-ryun, we
can see the gentle form and living landscape of Mt. Mudeungsan,
and understand why he chose to retire here, devoted to painting.
After
exploring the history of Gwangju art at the Uijae Art Museum, it’s
time to check out Gwangju’s current artistic scene at Art
Avenue. Located in the Gung-dong district, it is often compared
to Seoul’s Insa-dong with galleries large and small, antique
shops, tea set retailers, and handcraft stores. Every Saturday,
the alley outside Jungang Elementary School nearby holds a flea
market offering antiques, old books, and paintings, where you can
become lost in things from the past.
The story of traditional music in Gwangju can be seen at the Bitgoeul
Training Center for Korean Traditional Music. Here traditional instruments
such as the daegeum (bamboo flute), geomungo (fretted zither) are
gathered together, not in a museum, but in the open space of the
training center. While trying the instruments themselves, you can
loose yourself in the charm of traditional Korean music.
A global art festival: Gwangju Biennale
Gwangju’s
fame as the home of the arts began to spread out to the world the
introduction of the Gwangju Biennale in 1995. The Gwangju Biennale
2004 will take place from Septrember 10 to November 13at various
locations in the Jungoe Park Culture and Art Belt, the subway system,
and the May 18 Liberty Park. It provides an opportunity to encounter
current social and cultural trends through the diverse forms and
media of contemporary art.
The thematic exhibitions of the Gwangju Biennale 2004 are grouped
under four headings. Dust, uses a grain of dust as a metaphor for
progress that produces new life instead of death. Water, visually
expresses the idea of a drop of water as a medium for both
cleansing and communication, makes possible the creation of life
trough the combination of inorganic substances. Dust+Water, depicts
the power of nature to return to its original order. The Club, is
an aesthetic recreation space for all to enjoy.
There are also on-the-spot exhibitions and events. The Biennale
forecourt has been made into a footstep theme park, while the Korea
Express presents the true face of Korean art, and the May 18 Liberty
Park is seen in a new light as, And others. The subway system has
been made into a cultural space, and an EcoMetro, encouraging public
participation opened one month before the Biennale. The Gwangju
Biennale 2004 is set to transform Gwangju’s artistic tradition
into a new cultural hub of the world.
Yoon Hyun-young is a guest editor for ASIANA (culture), Lee
Dong-chun is a photographer concentrating on the beauties of Korea. |