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  • Trends

    Blooming trumpet vines become symbol of Korean summer

    Neungsohwa, or trumpet vine, is emerging as a summer icon for young Koreans, who increasingly treat its blooming season as an experience to savor. Part of the trumpet creeper family, the plant produces clusters of large flowers in vivid shades of yellow and orange. It sends long, flexible stems up walls, fences and tree trunks, reaching heights of up to 10 meters. It typically blooms from July to September, peaking around August. Its blooms spill over theatrically, highlighting even small spaces and creating a sense of drama. The plant is hardy, tolerating heat, rain and wind, and has long been cultivated at homes and gardens around Korea. The flower’s recent popularity roots in its name and symbolism. The name of the flower can be translated as "insulting the sky." Essays have gone viral on social media playing with the idea of “laughing at” or “defying” the harsh summer sky, along with the season's monsoon rains, typhoons and oppressive heat. Old stories describe the flower as a sign of dignity and integrity even in decline, as its blossoms drop intact rather than scattering

    2 MIN READBy Lee Hae-rin
    Blooming trumpet vines become symbol of Korean summer
  • Travel & Food

    Korea’s temples reinvent summer vacation with surfing, scuba, meditation

    2 MIN READBy Jhoo Dong-chan
    Korea’s temples reinvent summer vacation with surfing, scuba, meditation
  • Travel & Food

    Global influencers fan out across Korea to spotlight hidden culinary gems

    2 MIN READBy Lee Kyung-min
    Global influencers fan out across Korea to spotlight hidden culinary gems
  • Korean Heritage

    Beyond K-pop: Korea wants handicrafts to be its next cultural export hit

    2 MIN READBy Jhoo Dong-chan
    Beyond K-pop: Korea wants handicrafts to be its next cultural export hit
  • Lifestyle

    Why 'Wild Thing' viewers can't stop talking about Oh Jung-se over lead actor

    4 MIN READBy Hankookilbo
    Why 'Wild Thing' viewers can't stop talking about Oh Jung-se over lead actor
  • Lifestyle

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

    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
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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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Arts & Theater

Exploring Park Soo-keun's oeuvre in new light beyond limiting labels

Park Soo-keun's iconic piece, ″Tree and Two Women″ (1962) / Courtesy of MMCABy Park Han-solKorea's modern art master Park Soo-keun / Korea Times fileIn 1926, then a 12-year-old boy, Park Soo-keun's fateful encounter with Jean-Francois Millet's iconic painting of “The Angelus” awakened his artistic passion.His dream to become a painter was certainly an ambitious ― even reckless ― one, as his family's loss of fortune made any formal art education after elementary school an unthinkable luxury.Like Millet, Park (1914-1965) began to paint rural landscapes and the life of farmers on his own, forging his distinct style of art that eventually earned him a place at the Joseon Art Exhibition ― an annual art competition that served as a crucial platform for aspiring Korean painters during the 1910-1945 Japanese colonial era.But it wasn't until after the 1950-53 Korean War, during which he escaped his North Korean home and crossed the border, with great difficulty, that Park's oeuvre began to gradually gain recognition in South Korean art circles.His signature style ― gri

Nov 20, 2021By Park Han-sol
Exploring Park Soo-keun's oeuvre in new light beyond limiting labels
Books

Book reveals uncomfortable truth about 'Squid Game's global success

A scene from the dystopian Netflix series “Squid Game” / Courtesy of NetflixNew book untangles how Netflix pays studios and why Korean creators cannot amass fortunes despite global success By Kang Hyun-kyungBook cover for “Content Will be All the More Important in 2022” by Mirae BooksShortly after the dystopian drama series, “Squid Game,” became a global sensation following its ground-breaking debut in September on Netflix, a South Korean film producer's social media post caught the eyes of those in the entertainment industry. Sharing his thoughts about the implications of the Korean drama's unprecedented global success, Won Dong-yeon, president of the Seoul-based film studio, Real Rise, which released the mega-hit, “Along with the Gods” movies, compared “Squid Game” to “an underpaid Major League Baseball slugger who hit 40 home runs in his debut season.” “What is likely to happen in the near future is that the clubs (referring metaphorically to the U.S.-based streaming giants) will seek out another talente

Nov 19, 2021By Kang Hyun-kyung
Book reveals uncomfortable truth about 'Squid Game's global success
Travel & Food

Jeju Air to resume flights to Bangkok amid easing entry restrictions

Vendors wearing face masks sell vegetables at a market amid the spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Bangkok, Nov. 16. Reuters-YonhapJeju Air Co., South Korea's biggest budget carrier, said Friday it is resuming flights to Bangkok starting later next month on the back of eased entry curbs in the Southeast Asian country.Jeju Air will operate four flights per week for the Incheon-Bangkok route from Dec. 22, about 18 months after it suspended the route on the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic.Since the flight suspension, it has only been running chartered planes to fly South Korean citizens traveling for essential reasons such as business or public service.The flight resumption comes as Thailand has lifted the mandatory COVID-19 quarantine for vaccinated travelers from South Korea while requiring them to present negative COVID-19 test results.With the planned flight resumption, Jeju Air plans to speed up the process to normalize the regular routes amid the easing of entry restrictions in foreign countries, helped by rising vaccination rates. Jeju Air resumed flights to Guam e

Nov 19, 2021
Jeju Air to resume flights to Bangkok amid easing entry restrictions
Arts & Theater

South Africa-based artist brings domestic life to forefront via silk tapestries

Billie Zangewa works on a collage of silk fabrics laid out on a wooden table in her kitchen. Courtesy of the artist and Lehmann Maupin, New York, Hong Kong, Seoul and LondonBy Park Han-solSouth Africa-based visual artist Billie Zangewa embodies the message, “The personal is political,” through her artistic snapshot of domesticity.As an artist and a single mother, she turns the seemingly humdrum tasks and encounters at home ― things women do that often go unacknowledged, like cooking, sewing and inviting close family members for her 8-year-old son's birthday ― into hand-stitched silk tapestries.By putting her utmost personal life on display, she practices what she calls “daily feminism.”A series of Zangewa's silk collages are currently on display both at Lehmann Maupin Seoul and London ― in the exhibitions, “Flesh and Blood” and “Running Water,” respectively ― until early next year.As the title suggests, the gallery's Seoul show focuses on the artist's relationship with the close community of her family and friends, whose presence has be

Nov 19, 2021By Park Han-sol
South Africa-based artist brings domestic life to forefront via silk tapestries
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 19, 2021

Nov 18, 2021
DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 19, 2021
People & Events

Experts to discuss Korea-Japan relations at KOR-ASIA Forum 2021

 Ra Jong-yilShigeru IshibaThe Korea Times and its sister paper the Hankook Ilbo will host the KOR-ASIA Forum 2021 at the Westin Josun Seoul hotel in central Seoul, Nov. 25.Under the theme of "New Korea-Japan Relations: For a Future with Cooperation and Respect," the event will review the current diplomatic dynamics between Korea and Japan and explore a new way forward in relations between the neighboring countries.Among the speakers at the forum, Gachon University chair professor Ra Jong-yil, who served as former Korean ambassador to Japan and presidential secretary for national security, and Shigeru Ishiba, former Japanese defense minister and Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) secretary-general, will deliver special lectures on the future of Korea-Japan relations.Shin Kak-soo, a former Korean ambassador to Japan and vice foreign minister, and Shinsuke Sugiyama, a former Japanese ambassador to the U.S., will discuss the "recovery of diplomacy." Rep. Kim Han-jung of the ruling Democratic Party of Korea and LDP lawmaker Rui Matsukawa will debate the politics of reconciliation.Japanes

Nov 18, 2021
Experts to discuss Korea-Japan relations at KOR-ASIA Forum 2021
Trends

INTERVIEW Korean contemporary art captures attention in US, Europe

John R. Stomberg, the Virginia Rice Kelsey 1961s Director of the Hood Museum of Art, left, and Kim Sung-lim, an associate professor of art history at Dartmouth College / Courtesy of the Korea FoundationKorea's modern and contemporary art gaining momentum, while exhibitions in West remain outdatedBy Park Han-solMany, many years ago, the increase in trade between Western Europe and Asia following the Age of Discovery, which began in the 1400s, built Western Europeans' fascination with what they called “the Orient.”They had discovered “exotic” Asia thorough its arts and design. The artists' enthrallment eventually took the form of “Chinoiserie,” which originated from the French word for “after the Chinese taste.”Inspired by motifs in Chinese art, the style is a European imitation and evocation of what they perceived to be the art of East Asia. The popularity of Chinoiserie reached its peak in the 17th century, as it paired well with lavishly embellished Rococo decorations.Then, as trade with Japan became possible in 1858, Europeans' intere

Nov 18, 2021By Park Han-sol
[INTERVIEW] Korean contemporary art captures attention in US, Europe
Travel & Food

Must-know tips and nice accommodation for travel to Singapore

Seen is Singapore's famous view around the Marina Bay district, a popular tourist attraction there. gettyimagesbankSearch for flights between Singapore, Korea soaring with travel bubble accordBy Jun Ji-hyeA travel bubble agreement signed between Singapore and Korea in October went into effect Monday. Singapore has since allowed fully vaccinated visitors to travel between Incheon International Airport and Changi Airport without quarantining through its Vaccinated Travel Lane (VTL) scheme. Following the signing of the agreement, the search volume for flights to both Singapore and Korea has rapidly increased, reflecting the hopes of people who have been stuck at home due to the prolonged COVID-19 pandemic about the resumption of international tourism, according to global online travel agencies. Hotels.com said that it saw a spike in the search volume for outbound flight to both countries in the second week of October when the travel bubble news was announced.Flight searches to Korea from Singapore spiked from the mere double digits to over 1,100 searches on the day of announcement. The

Nov 18, 2021By Jun Ji-hye
Must-know tips and nice accommodation for travel to Singapore
Arts & Theater

Artist Georg Baselitz featured at newly opened Thaddaeus Ropac Seoul

Installation view of Georg Baselitz's solo exhibition, “Hotel garni,” held at Thaddaeus Ropac in Hannam-dong, Seoul / Courtesy Thaddaeus Ropac gallery ― London, Paris, Salzburg, SeoulBy Park Han-solHaving opened its doors last month in Hannam-dong, Thaddaeus Ropac Seoul is currently hosting an exhibition of the latest paintings and drawings by celebrated German artist Georg Baselitz.Named “Hotel garni,” which refers to a small inn in French, the show features a series of paintings of female figures suspended upside down in an undefined, black void. Although they are inspired by his wife and frequent muse, Elke Baselitz, they are not her portraits; rather, they are abstracted representations of human forms and physicality, in general.The titles of the pieces provide a hint of where his subjects are supposed to be located: “Einzelzimmer, Einzelbett” (Single Room, Single Bed) and “Do not disturb.” The series is his way of making a visual reference to the brothel-inspired scene captured in Picasso's iconic “Les Demoiselles d'Avignon&r

Nov 17, 2021By Park Han-sol
Artist Georg Baselitz featured at newly opened Thaddaeus Ropac Seoul
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 18, 2021

Nov 17, 2021
DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 18, 2021
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