Light of Mt. Geumgang Cheonhwadae
2014 · 98×64 cm · Korean Paper, Acrylic on Canvas
Inside the Metropolitan Museum's "Diamond Mountains" Exhibition (2018)
Thirty-three photographs taken by the artist at the Diamond Mountains - Travel and Nostalgia in Korean Art exhibition (Feb 7 - May 20, 2018) at The Met's Arts of Korea Gallery. The images capture the installation including the artist's own The Light on the Cheonhwadae and Raining on Manmulsang, alongside Jeong Seon's true-view landscape albums, modern masters such as Byun Kwan-sik and Lee Ungno, and Elizabeth Keith's Mt. Geumgang.
Related materials for this work
- Text Review 2018-04-30 · 이소영
The Diamond Mountains as Backdrop to the Historic Korean Summit — Curator's Essay by Soyoung Lee (The Met Perspectives) (2018)
At the historic summit held in the Joint Security Area of the Korean Demilitarized Zone on Friday, April 27, the leaders of North and South Korea appeared before a monumental, panoramic painting of the iconic Diamond Mountains (Mount Geumgang). These mountains, located in present-day North Korea and inaccessible for much of the post-war period, are the subject of the landmark exhibition Diamond Mountains: Travel and Nostalgia in Korean Art, on view at The Met Fifth Avenue through May 20, 2018.
The artist whose painting appeared at the summit, Shin Jangshik, is among the painters featured in the show. Shin has almost exclusively devoted his energy to the subject of the Diamond Mountains since the early 1990s, before he ever visited them. When the Diamond Mountains reopened to tourism in 1998, he was on the first ship sailing for Geumgang. Since then, he has journeyed multiple times, through different routes and locations and at all times of the year.
In 2014 he painted a series of twelve scenes depicting various sites within the mountains in the four seasons. The Light at Cheonhwadae captures the brilliant sunlight reflected off the snowcapped peaks. Shin, who trained in Western techniques, typically uses acrylic on canvas (or on Korean mulberry paper over canvas), capturing the effervescence and luminosity of the landscape in bright colors.
Another work in the Twelve Scenes of Mount Geumgang series, Raining on Manmulsang Rocks, finds the artist deliberately recreating the effect of traditional ink painting in acrylic. The muted and haunting impact offers an unexpected counterpoint to the vividness of the rest of the paintings in this series.
The tradition of creating visual imagery of the Diamond Mountains based on actual travel can be traced back to the eighteenth century, with the master painter Jeong Seon, whose important paintings have inspired generations of artists since and anchor The Met's exhibition.
I invite you to The Met's Arts of Korea Gallery to experience the breathtaking landscapes of these mountains, here in New York.
- Mixed Feature 2018-02-07 · The Metropolitan Museum of Art
Metropolitan Museum Exhibition Page — "Diamond Mountains: Travel and Nostalgia in Korean Art" (2018)
The Met's official exhibition page for "Diamond Mountains: Travel and Nostalgia in Korean Art" (February 7 – May 20, 2018), marking the 20th anniversary of The Met's Arts of Korea Gallery and coinciding with South Korea's hosting of the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics. Nearly thirty works depicting Mt. Geumgang from the eighteenth century to the present, including a designated National Treasure album by Jeong Seon (1676–1759) on loan from the National Museum of Korea — most never before displayed in the U.S. Shin Jang-sik featured as a contemporary contributor with Winter Mt. Geumgang and Light of Manmulsang. Two official Met videos embedded — the exhibition introduction and the Sunday at The Met lecture on "Landscapes: Real and Imagined." Organized in collaboration with the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism (MCST) and the National Museum of Korea (NMK). The New York Times called it "a melancholy beauty of a show ... flabbergasting loans."
Exhibition Introduction — Diamond Mountains: Travel and Nostalgia in Korean Art (The Met official) Sunday at The Met Lecture — Landscapes: Real and Imagined (The Met official) - Mixed News 2018-02-07 · Artist's Blog
Korean Press Coverage: Met Museum 'Diamond Mountains' Special Exhibition (2018)
Three-outlet print coverage of the Met Museum's 'Diamond Mountains: Travel and Nostalgia in Korean Art' special exhibition, marking the Pyeongchang Winter Olympics and the Korean Gallery's 20th anniversary. Artist Shin Jang-sik featured as a contributing contemporary artist.
Coverage (4)
- The Korea Times (US Edition) 2018-02-07 · 김소영
- The Korea Daily (NY Edition) 2018-02-07 · 최수진
- KBS News 2018-02-07 · 김철우 특파원
- The Dong-A Ilbo 2018-02-08 · 박용 특파원
KBS News — Coverage of the Met Museum 'Diamond Mountains' Exhibition (Reporter Kim Chul-woo, Feb 7, 2018) -
- Text News 2018-04-26 · Artist's Blog
Press Coverage: Shin Jang-sik's "Mt. Geumgang from Sangpaldam" at the April 27 Inter-Korean Summit Venue (2018)
Five-outlet coverage surrounding the April 27, 2018 inter-Korean summit and the painting Mt. Geumgang from Sangpaldam (2001, 681×181 cm) installed in the second-floor meeting room of the Peace House at Panmunjom. On April 26 (eve of the summit), three phone interviews — Yonhap News (Jeong A-ran), JoongAng Ilbo (Lee Eun-ju), and Kyunghyang Shinmun — cover the painting's technique (fusing ink-painting lines, folk-painting colors, and contemporary landscape sensibility around the Cheonhwadae motif), 25 years of practice (the 1998 first North Korea visit that shifted his work from conceptual to realist landscape), the Mt. Geumgang lineage in Korean art history (Jeong Seon's Geumgang-jeondo, Byeon Gwan-sik's Samseonam), and the other artworks installed throughout the Peace House (Min Jeong-gi's Bukhansan, Kim Jun-gwon's San-un, Park Dae-seong's Ilchul-bong). On April 27 (summit day), MoneyToday (Shin Hyeon-woo) reports the Blue House quote that the painting replaced a Mt. Halla piece originally hung in that spot. On April 28 (day after), OhmyNews (Lee Ju-yeon) publishes a full Q&A spot-interview: the painting had been stored in the artist's studio for 17 years since 2001, and the artist's analogy that "if Brandenburg Gate symbolizes German unification, Mt. Geumgang would symbolize Korean unification."
Coverage (5)
- Yonhap News 2018-04-26 · 정아란
- JoongAng Ilbo 2018-04-26 · 이은주
- Kyunghyang Shinmun 2018-04-26
- MoneyToday 2018-04-27 · 신현우
- OhmyNews 2018-04-28 · 이주연 (편집: 김지현)
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- Video News 2018-04-30 · Fox 5 New York
Korean Painter Shin Jang-sik on U.S. Television (Fox 5 New York) — The Summit Painting and the Met's Diamond Mountains Exhibition
Fox 5 New York TV coverage connecting Mt. Geumgang from Sangpaldam—displayed at the April 27 inter-Korean summit—with the contemporaneous "Diamond Mountains: Travel and Nostalgia in Korean Art" special exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The segment features a Skype interview with artist Shin Jang-sik and remarks from Soyoung Lee, curator for Korean art at the Met.
Coverage (1)
- Fox 5 New York 2018-04-30
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