간편문의
공연/문화

호주 [마감] Poetry in Clay

관**
 
Asian Art Museum of San Francisco
 
Whimsical, rustic, direct, fresh, audacious, contemporary ? these are some of the qualities that have been attributed to the type of Korean ceramics known as buncheong. Buncheong ceramics are formed on a potter"s wheel. They are covered with white slip (a mixture of white clay and water), which is decorated in many different ways. The term buncheong, developed in the early twentieth century, means "white-slipped stoneware."

 
The exhibition Poetry in Clay, opening September 16 and running through January 8, 2012, will fill the museum"s Korean art galleries. It features more than fifty-five masterpieces, including six Korean national treasures, from the Leeum, Samsung Museum of Art in Seoul, Korea. In addition, selected Japanese ceramics from the Asian Art Museum"s collections show Japanese connections to Korean ceramics. Finally, contemporary buncheong as well as other forms of contemporary art influenced by Korean ceramics, on loan from Korea, demonstrate the vitality of this vibrant art form today.

 
The aesthetics and functions of buncheong ceramics reflect social developments of the beginnings of the Joseon dynasty at the end of the fourteenth century. Most were everyday wares used by people at many levels of society. Later buncheong allowed for increased regional expressiveness and creativity.

 
In the second half of the sixteenth century, a vogue for porcelain caused buncheong ceramic production to decline in Korea. But the style continued to be popular in Japan, where it had been introduced by Korean potters transported there following the Japanese invasions of Korea in the 1590s.

 
During the twentieth century, Korean artists began to revive the buncheong style. Today buncheong continues to inspire contemporary artists. Not only potters but also artists working in other mediums are trying to recapture the natural beauty of traditional buncheong ceramics.