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  • Travel & Food

    Meet Korea’s pioneering ‘instant noodle critic’

    For many, instant noodles are a quick, cheap meal designed for convenience. But for Ji Young-jun, Korea's pioneering "ramyeon critic," they represent a lifetime of history, complex food science and a rapidly growing cultural phenomenon. Ji’s unconventional journey into the world of noodles began during a period of personal frustration. After enduring consecutive failures on Korea's grueling college entrance exam, he enlisted in the military. It was while wandering the aisles of the military commissary (PX) that he found an unexpected spark of inspiration. "Before finishing my service, I set a humble goal for myself: 'Let’s taste every single instant noodle available here,'" Ji recalls during an interview with The Korea Times, Monday. "Astonishingly, that simple objective completely revitalized my military life and filled it with excitement. I wanted to carry this amazing energy into the civilian world, so in 2013, I began sharing my detailed reviews on social media." For a decade, Ji balanced his passion for instant noodles with a stable career as a primary school teacher. However,

    4 MIN READBy Park Jin-hai
    Meet Korea’s pioneering ‘instant noodle critic’
  • Travel & Food

    Hong Kong teams up with Korea's travel industry group to invite tourists back

    2 MIN READBy Baek Byung-yeul
    Hong Kong teams up with Korea's travel industry group to invite tourists back
  • Trends

    Why Gen Z are turning to 'worry stones' to ease anxiety

    2 MIN READBy Hankookilbo
    Why Gen Z are turning to 'worry stones' to ease anxiety
  • People & Events

    'KPop Demon Hunters' director visits Lotte World Adventure

    1 MIN READBy Jhoo Dong-chan
    'KPop Demon Hunters' director visits Lotte World Adventure
  • People & Events

    Exhibition honors heroes of Korean War

    2 MIN READBy Jhoo Dong-chan
    Exhibition honors heroes of Korean War
  • Korean Heritage

    Rare shamanic paintings gain national heritage status

    2 MIN READBy Jhoo Dong-chan
    Rare shamanic paintings gain national heritage status
  • Music

    Lim Yunchan wins Instrumentalist of the Year at Germany's top classical awards

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Lim Yunchan wins Instrumentalist of the Year at Germany's top classical awards
  • Trends

    Rare Pokémon cards fetch premium prices among Gen Z, sparking thefts

    2 MIN READBy Hankookilbo
    Rare Pokémon cards fetch premium prices among Gen Z, sparking thefts
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CEO & Publisher: Oh Young-jinDigital News Email: webmaster@koreatimes.co.krTel: 02-724-2114Online newspaper registration No: 서울,아52844Date of registration: 2020.02.05Masthead: The Korea TimesCopyright © koreatimes.co.kr. All rights reserved.

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DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 11, 2022

Nov 10, 2022
DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 11, 2022
Arts & Theater

Video artist Paik Nam-june's exhibition looks back on his legacy

This photo shows late video artist Paik Nam-june's robot sculpture "Rehabilitation of Genghis Khan" at the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (MMCA). NewsisA retrospective exhibition on Korea-born video art pioneer Paik Nam-june (1932-2006) will open this week to showcase his essential artworks and shed light on his broad influence on contemporary Korean art. The special exhibition "Paik Nam June Effect" will run from Nov. 10 to Feb. 26 at the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (MMCA) in Gwacheon, just south of Seoul. The exhibition will present 43 pieces of Paik's popular works in the 1980s and 1990s, including the 13-part video sculpture "My Faust" and robot sculpture "Rehabilitation of Genghis Khan". There will be 60 paintings, installations and photos by 25 Korean artists who were active in the 1990s to offer a glimpse of Paik's artistic influence across genres. His interviews, columns, videos presented at 1993 Venice Biennale and 1995 Lyon Biennale, as well as surveys, "Nam June Paik, Video Time, Video Space" (1992), and "the Whitney Biennale Seoul" (1993

Nov 9, 2022
Video artist Paik Nam-june's exhibition looks back on his legacy
Books

INTERVIEW International Booker Prize-winning 'Tomb of Sand' breaks down borders, celebrates plurality of life

Geetanjali Shree, Indian author and the winner of this year's International Booker Prize for her novel, "Tomb of Sand," speaks at the Expo Centre Sharjah in the United Arab Emirates, Nov. 3, as part of the ongoing 41st edition of the Sharjah International Book Fair. Courtesy of Sharjah Book AuthorityIndian novelist Geetanjali Shree discusses her genre-defying masterpiece at SIBFBy Park Han-solSHARJAH, United Arab Emirates ― “No, no, I won't get up. Noooooo, I won't rise nowwww. Nooo rising nyooww. Nyooo riiise nyoooo. Now rise new. Now, I'll rise anew.”Uttered by author Geetanjali Shree in her mother tongue, Hindi, on the morning of Nov. 3, the delightful wordplay echoed through the convention hall at the Expo Centre Sharjah, filled with nearly 400 secondary school students from across the United Arab Emirates.The passage comes from her fifth novel, “Tomb of Sand” (“Ret Samadhi” in its 2018 Hindi original), which earned her the honor of becoming the first-ever Indian novelist to win the International Booker Prize early this year after competing wit

Nov 9, 2022By Park Han-sol
[INTERVIEW] International Booker Prize-winning 'Tomb of Sand' breaks down borders, celebrates plurality of life
Trends

Gucci to sponsor preservation of Gyeongbok Palace

Gyeongbok Palace in Jongno District, central Seoul / NewsisBy Park Han-solItalian luxury fashion house Gucci has announced a three-year sponsorship agreement with the Cultural Heritage Administration (CHA) of Korea designed to preserve and safeguard Gyeongbok Palace. Gucci President and CEO Marco Bizzarri signed a memorandum of understanding (MOU) with Choi Eung-chon, head of the CHA, Nov. 1, promising cooperation on future restoration projects of the historic Joseon-era royal palace, the company said, Wednesday.“Beauty serves as a continuous source of inspiration for Gucci, but it also requires constant care and effort,” Bizzarri said. “The brand's cooperation with the CHA will help safeguard the rich artistic heritage of this historical site.”The global brand announced previously its plan to host a fashion show at the palace on the first day of November to showcase its “Gucci Cosmogonie Collection Seoul.” The celestial-themed event was to mark Alessandro Michele's debut show in Korea to present the collection unveiled earlier at Castel Del Monte

Nov 9, 2022By Park Han-sol
Gucci to sponsor preservation of Gyeongbok Palace
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 10, 2022

Nov 9, 2022
DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 10, 2022
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 09, 2022

Nov 8, 2022
DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 09, 2022
Trends

Italian Egyptologist views future museums as 3-pronged: physical, digital, metaverse

Christian Greco, Italian Egyptologist and director of Museo Egizio in Turin, the second-largest museum in the world dedicated to Egyptian antiquities after Cairo, speaks during a talk entitled “Writing History in the Digital Age” at the Expo Centre Sharjah in the United Arab Emirates, Nov. 4. The session was held as part of the ongoing 41st edition of the Sharjah International Book Fair. Courtesy of Sharjah Book Authority Christian Greco discusses horizons for museums faced with challenges of 21st century at SIBFBy Park Han-solSHARJAH, United Arab Emirates ― How will a museum survive in the era of digitization and that new buzzword we can't seem to escape ― metaverse? Will the brick-and-mortar repositories of humanity's collective history give way to their virtual counterparts?Egyptologist Christian Greco doesn't believe in that idea of a zero-sum game between the physical and the virtual.In fact, the historian, who also serves as the director of Museo Egizio in Ita

Nov 7, 2022By Park Han-sol
Italian Egyptologist views future museums as 3-pronged: physical, digital, metaverse
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 08, 2022

Nov 7, 2022
DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 08, 2022
People & Events

Cartoonist Jeong Hun dies at 50

Cartoonist Jeong Hun, who had his cartoons carried by the Cine21 magazine for 25 years, died of leukemia, Saturday. YonhapBy Kim RahnCartoonist Jeong Hun, who had his cartoons carried in the movie magazine Cine21 every week for 25 years, died on Saturday. He was 50.He was diagnosed with acute leukemia at the end of 2021, according to his bereaved family. Jeong, who initially dreamed of becoming a soldier, began his career as a cartoonist after winning a rookie cartoonist contest in 1995 and getting an offer from a reporter of the magazine to draw cartoons parodying films.A poster parodying the 2002 film Chihwaseon by cartoonist Jeong Hun / Captured from Cine21 websiteFrom 1996 to 2020, Jeong's two-page cartoon on Cine21, titled “Jeong Huni Cartoon,” which was carried on almost the last page, was a must-see section of the weekly magazine, as readers enjoyed his parodies of movies which often contained satire directed toward then-governments and social issues.After 10 years of working for Cine21, he quit the serial and other cartoonists took over the section, but he came ba

Nov 7, 2022By Kim Rahn
Cartoonist Jeong Hun dies at 50
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 07, 2022

Nov 6, 2022
DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 07, 2022
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