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  • Lifestyle

    K-snacks sell nostalgia with tableware, hand warmers and storybooks

    Those were among the reactions posted on social media after Binggrae announced that its iconic Banana Flavored Milk — affectionately nicknamed "Fat Banana Milk" ("Ttungba") for its distinctive bottle shape — would be transformed into a ceramic tableware set. Since its debut in 1974, the drink has become one of Korea's best-known beverages, enjoyed across generations. More recently, it has also gained popularity among foreign visitors thanks to the trend of mixing it with coffee and other convenience-store drinks. Capitalizing on renewed interest in the brand, Binggrae recently unveiled a ceramic dining set inspired by the bottle's distinctive shape, which itself was modeled after the traditional Korean moon jar of the late Joseon Kingdom era. Developed in collaboration with premium ceramics brand Yido Onhwa, the set resembles a bottle of Banana Flavored Milk when assembled, but separates into five pieces: a rice bowl, soup bowl, side-dish bowl, plate and small sauce dish. Available in the drink's signature yellow banana flavor and pink strawberry flavor designs, the collection debute

    3 MIN READBy Hankookilbo
    K-snacks sell nostalgia with tableware, hand warmers and storybooks
  • Arts & Theater

    Damien Hirst exhibition at MMCA attracts 540,000 visitors

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Damien Hirst exhibition at MMCA attracts 540,000 visitors
  • People & Events

    Daegu sets stage for global push with chicken and beer festival lineup

    2 MIN READBy Lee Kyung-min
    Daegu sets stage for global push with chicken and beer festival lineup
  • Tech & Science

    KAIST appoints Bae Choong-sik as new president

    2 MIN READBy Nam Hyun-woo
    KAIST appoints Bae Choong-sik as new president
  • Korean Heritage

    Stitching Korean spirit: Costume designer reimagines hanbok for world stage

    5 MIN READBy Park Jin-hai
    Stitching Korean spirit: Costume designer reimagines hanbok for world stage
  • Korean Heritage

    Ancient royal banquets meet augmented reality in high tech airport exhibition

    2 MIN READBy Jhoo Dong-chan
    Ancient royal banquets meet augmented reality in high tech airport exhibition
  • Lifestyle

    From work to World Cup woes: 3 simple ways to ease stress

    2 MIN READBy Kormedi.com
    From work to World Cup woes: 3 simple ways to ease stress
  • Travel & Food

    Exiled Vietnamese prince sparks tourism push into rural Korea

    2 MIN READBy Lee Kyung-min
    Exiled Vietnamese prince sparks tourism push into rural Korea
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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 - DECEMBER 02, 2021

Dec 1, 2021
DAILY FORTUNE - DECEMBER 02, 2021
Arts & Theater

Seoul's first craftworks museum highlights artisans

A variety of “gat,” a type of traditional Korean hat, and strings of the hat from the Joseon era are displayed at the Seoul Museum of Craft Art in Jongno District, Seoul, Monday. YonhapBy Bahk Eun-jiPeople admire the beauty of craftworks, but they rarely appreciate the artisans who turn materials obtained from nature into useful objects for daily life.The Seoul Museum of Craft Art (SeMoCA), which had its official opening on Tuesday, is dedicated to both the craftworks and the creators.Korea's first public museum specializing in handcrafts opened on the site of the former Pungmoon Girls' High School in Jongno District, central Seoul, near Insa-dong. Before the official opening on Tuesday, the museum was partially accessible to visitors by offering an exhibition that opened in July.Kim Soo-jung, director of the Seoul Museum of Craft Art, speaks during an opening ceremony at the auditorium of the museum in Jongno District, Seoul, Monday. Yonhap“It is the one and only craftwork museum in Korea,” Kim Soo-jung, director of the museum, said at a press conference befo

Dec 1, 2021By Bahk Eun-ji
Seoul's first craftworks museum highlights artisans
People & Events

Winners of 10th Korea Multicultural Youth Awards announced

Yang Geun-mo, student at Geumsan Hitech High School, has won the grand prize of the 10th Korea Multicultural Youth Awards hosted by The Korea Times. Korea Times photo by Shim Hyun-chulThe Korea Times has selected 11 students as winners of the 10th Korea Multicultural Youth Awards.Yang Geun-mo from Geumsan Hitech High School in Geumsan, South Chungcheong Province, won the grand prize, to be presented by Minister of Gender Equality and Family Chung Young-ai.Born to a Vietnamese mother and Korean father, Yang was recognized for his diligent and sincere attitude, which led him to obtain technician certificates in various fields at a young age. He also taught himself guitar to a high level, winning a provincial music contest.Pak Olga from Kyongil High School of Tourism and Business Management in Ansan, Gyeonggi Province, won the special jury award, and Pyo Yoon-seo from Maehol High School in Osan, Gyeonggi Province, received the Korean Association for Multicultural Education Award. Han Ga-in from Okgye Middle School in Gumi, North Gyeongsang Province, received the Semoon Chang Award, whic

Dec 1, 2021By Kim Rahn
Winners of 10th Korea Multicultural Youth Awards announced
Arts & Theater

Canvas becomes flower garden from artist's memories of childhood

Cho Sung-hee's "Red Garden with White" (2021), which will be on display throughout December at her solo exhibition, "Land of Imagination," at Hakgojae Gallery in central Seoul / Courtesy of Hakgojae GalleryBy Park Han-solVisual artist Cho Sung-hee's painting may look like a “Dansaekhwa” (“monochrome painting”) work from afar, awash with the vivid hues of red or snow white. But a closer look reveals hundreds of thousands of flower petals and stems formed from hanji (traditional Korean paper made from the bark of mulberry trees) firmly placed onto the canvas by hand.For the 72-year-old artist, the artwork becomes an imaginary flowerbed that summons specific memories from her own childhood ― when she grew up in a hanok (traditional Korean house) with its windows and doors pasted with hanji, surrounded by an idyllic garden tended by her father.Eighteen of her paintings studded with constellations of hanji flowers and one recent wooden installation piece will be on view at the exhibition, “Land of Imagination,” throughout the month of December at Hakgoj

Nov 30, 2021By Park Han-sol
Canvas becomes flower garden from artist's memories of childhood
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - DECEMBER 01, 2021

Nov 30, 2021
DAILY FORTUNE - DECEMBER 01, 2021
People & Events

Essay awardees give helpful advice on AI, basic income

The Korea Times President-Publisher Oh Young-jin, left, and Woori Bank Executive Vice President Hwang Kyu-mok, right, applaud after giving awards to the winners of the newspaper's 17th English Economic Essay Contest at the Lotte Hotel Seoul, Tuesday. From left are Oh, Hwang Jee-seon, Kyle Wardwell, Lee Jae-hyeon, Koh Woo-sung, Lee Yoon-ki, Samuel Wilson and Hwang. Korea Times photo by Shim Hyun-chulBy Park Jae-hyukIn their award-winning English economic essays, university students suggested ways for society to enable co-prosperity between people and artificial intelligence (AI), and expressed their thoughts on the merits of introducing a basic income system here.The Korea Times invited the six winners of the newspaper's 17th English Economic Essay Contest to an awards ceremony at the Lotte Hotel Seoul, Tuesday.Korea Times President-Publisher Oh Young-jin and Woori Bank Executive Vice President Hwang Kyu-mok also attended the event ― the bank has sponsored the contest since its inception.This year, students were asked to write on one of two subjects: “What are your suggestions f

Nov 30, 2021By Park Jae-hyuk
Essay awardees give helpful advice on AI, basic income
People & Events

Annual lantern festival lights up downtown Seoul

Colorful paper lanterns are displayed over Cheonggye Stream in Seoul, Nov. 25, a day before the opening of the Seoul Lantern Festival. YonhapBy Bahk Eun-jiThe Seoul Lantern Festival kicked off on Nov. 26 to light up the city center with more than 80 paper lanterns over Cheonggye Stream, for a 10-day run through Dec. 5, according to the Seoul Metropolitan Government and the Seoul Tourism Organization (STO).For the annual event, 83 lanterns, made with mostly paper, are displayed along a 700-meter section of Cheonggye Stream, from the waterfall at the start of the stream down to Jangtong Bridge. The lantern festival, which marks its 13th year, is one of Seoul's representative festivals that illuminates the stream area with colorful lanterns every winter.A citizen takes a photo of colorful paper lanterns displayed over Cheonggye Stream in central Seoul, Nov. 25, a day before the opening of the Seoul Lantern Festival. YonhapLast year, the festival was held in four special tourism zones ― Jamsil, Itaewon, Dongdaemun and Myeong-dong ― as part of the city government's efforts to revitalize t

Nov 30, 2021By Bahk Eun-ji
Annual lantern festival lights up downtown Seoul
Arts & Theater

Late Korean realist sculptor's works reframed through photographic exhibition

Installation view of the exhibition, "Images of Eternity: Kwon Jin Kyu x Mok Jungwook," held at PKM Gallery in central Seoul / Courtesy of PKM GalleryKwon Jin-kyu's sculptures seen through eyes of fashion photographerBy Park Han-solKwon Jin-kyu, a pioneer of modern sculpture in Korea / Courtesy of Kwon Jin Kyu Commemoration Foundation and Lee Jung-hoonAlong his path of artistic exploration towards reaching the zenith of sculptural elegance, modern sculptor Kwon Jin-kyu (1922-1973) had a close but tumultuous relationship with Korea's neighboring country, Japan ― one that was at times oppressive and at others inspirational.Born during the 1910-45 Japanese colonial era in the now-North Korean city of Hamheung, Kwon was a child who was fascinated by the materiality of dirt and clay. At the age of 20, he became one of several million laborers drafted to Japan to work in steel factories. Fortunately he managed to escape and returned to his home country more than a year later.But after Korea's liberation, he went back to Japan to study sculpture at the Musashino Art University, Tokyo, under

Nov 29, 2021By Park Han-sol
Late Korean realist sculptor's works reframed through photographic exhibition
Travel & Food

Food columnist continues disparaging Korean-style fried chicken

gettyimagesbankBy Lee Hae-rinKorean food columnist Hwang Kyo-ik, who created a stir by saying Korean-style fried chicken is not tasty due to the small size of the birds, has raised a question about its global popularity.He referred to a survey about Korean food, conducted by the Korean Food Promotion Institute and the Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs of 8,500 people in 17 major cities around the world who have tried Korean food, released Sunday.According to the survey, 30 percent said they like Korean-style fried chicken the most and intend to eat it again. Chicken was followed by kimchi at 27.7 percent, bibimbap (rice mixed with assorted vegetables) at 27.2 percent and tteokbokki (rice cakes stir-fried in spicy sauce) at 18 percent.Hwang raised the question whether fried chicken can be considered a “Korean” food, saying no traditional Korean ingredients are used ― chicken breeds were from the U.S. and the U.K., the feeds consisted of grains imported from the U.S. and the oil used to fry them comes from beans or corn from the U.S.“Are we really proud

Nov 29, 2021By Lee Hae-rin
Food columnist continues disparaging Korean-style fried chicken
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 30, 2021

Nov 29, 2021
DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 30, 2021
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