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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

State-run theater company launches online streaming platform

Kim Kwang-bo, artistic director of the National Theater Company of Korea (NTCK), and other participants at an opening event for the company's new streaming platform, Online Theater, watch a projected video at its Myeongdong Theater in Seoul, Monday. Courtesy of NTCKBy Park Ji-wonPoster for “Online Theater” by the National Theater Company of Korea (NTCK) / Courtesy of NTCKThe National Theater Company of Korea (NTCK) has opened a streaming service platform, Online Theater, to reach out to a broader audience including the disabled. Its artistic director said Monday that NTCK aims to mimic the U.K.'s National Theater Live, which broadcasts via satellite live performances of its productions to cinemas and arts centers around the world.The platform opened at 2:00 p.m. showcasing five plays performed between 2020 and 2021 including “Faust Ending,” “The Tragedy of X,” “The Orphan of Zhao: Seeds of Revenge” and “Scapin.” They all include subtitles, while some, such as “Scapin,” provide voice explanations for the blind and

Nov 1, 2021By Park Ji-won
State-run theater company launches online streaming platform
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 02, 2021

Nov 1, 2021
DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 02, 2021
People & Events

Winners of 52nd Modern Korean Literature Translation Awards

Fiction Grand Prize winner Youngjae Josephine BaeThe Korea Times is pleased to announce the winners of its 52nd Modern Korean Literature Translation Awards.This year, the Grand Prize in fiction, awarded by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism, goes to Youngjae Josephine Bae for her translation of novelist Park Hyoung-su's “The Tall Dwarf.” The Grand Prize in the poetry category is awarded to Joanne Park for her translation of poems by Yu Hyoung-jin, including “Adolescence.” The Commendation Award winner for fiction is Clare Richards for her translation of Kim Keum-hee's “Half of His Egg Muffin.”We congratulate all participants and winners for their hard work and hope for more entries next year, as Korean literature needs more skilled translators to reach a global audience. The awards are sponsored by the Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism and KB Financial Group.Poetry Grand Prize winner Joanne ParkGrand Prize in fiction: Youngjae Josephine Bae (Park Hyoung-su's “The Tall Dwarf”)Grand Prize in poetry: Joanne Park (Yu Hyoung-j

Nov 1, 2021By Kwak Yeon-soo
Winners of 52nd Modern Korean Literature Translation Awards
Arts & Theater

Ahn Chang-hong exhibition to celebrate 60th anniversary of Korea-Ecuador diplomatic ties

The “Ghost Fashion” series by Ahn Chang-hong. From left, “2021'1,” “2021'8” and “2021'18” / Courtesy of the artist and Savina MuseumBy Park Han-solIn celebration of the upcoming 60th anniversary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between Korea and Ecuador in 2022, a special exhibition of Korean artist Ahn Chang-hong's work will open its doors to viewers in Ecuador's capital, Quito.The show, scheduled for Nov. 4 to Dec. 14, is Korea's first “reciprocal exhibition” of its own artist in the South American country, following “National Painter of Ecuador: Oswaldo Guayasamin,” which was held earlier this year at the Savina Museum of Contemporary Art in northwestern Seoul.Ahn's 60 pieces, from oil paintings to large-scale installations, will adorn the walls of Casa Museo Guayasamin ― the legendary painter's residence-turned-museum ― as well as La Capilla del Hombre (“The Chapel of Man”), alongside the permanent collection of Guayasamin's own artworks.This opportunity is the first time for La Capill

Oct 31, 2021By Park Han-sol
Ahn Chang-hong exhibition to celebrate 60th anniversary of Korea-Ecuador diplomatic ties
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 01, 2021

Oct 31, 2021
DAILY FORTUNE - NOVEMBER 01, 2021
Travel & Food

Aespa's Karina featured in Seoul's tourist promotion program

By Jun Ji-hyeThe Seoul Metropolitan Government will air its tour promotion program, featuring K-pop girl group aespa's Karina and actor David Lee McInnis, to 19 countries, beginning Saturday. K-pop girl group aespa's Karina is featured in the Seoul Metropolitan Government's tour promotion program, “Travel Diary Soul: Seoul.” Courtesy of Seoul Metropolitan Government The city said the four-video series, produced jointly with global television network History Channel, will be aired to 39.5 million households in 19 countries including Japan and Southeast Asian nations until mid-December. Karina is the leader of aespa that has generated growing popularity around the world since its single “Next Level” was released in May.McInnis is an American actor based in Seoul who has been featured in various Korean TV dramas such as “Descendants of the Sun” and “Mr. Sunshine.”The two become travel guides in the video series, titled “Travel Diary Soul: Seoul.”Karina introduces tren

Oct 30, 2021By Jun Ji-hye
Aespa's Karina featured in Seoul's tourist promotion program
Arts & Theater

Korea's oldest combat techniques text to become national treasure

Pages from “Muyejebo,” Korea's oldest text of combat techniques published in 1598 / Courtesy of Cultural Heritage AdministrationPages from “Muyejebo,” Korea's oldest text of combat techniques published in 1598 / Courtesy of Cultural Heritage AdministrationBy Park Ji-wonKorea's oldest-known fighting arts manual, titled “Muyejebo,” published in 1598 to train soldiers of the 1392-1910 Joseon Kingdom in armed combat techniques, is among seven cultural heritage items to be newly added to the list of state-recognized treasures, the Cultural Heritage Administration (CHA) said Friday.The CHA said “Muyejebo” is a manual published by Hangyo of Hunryeondogam, Joseon's military training office, under King Seonjo's order following the 1592-98 Japanese invasions of Korea, as a training guide designed for Korea's warriors. The author describes six close-range combat skills and ways to make weapons, many of which were compiled from “Jixiao Xinshu” a military manual of the Chinese Ming Dynasty, with illustrations.It specifically shows how to

Oct 30, 2021By Park Ji-won
Korea's oldest combat techniques text to become national treasure
Arts & Theater

Dansaekhwa exhibition, book bring Yun Hyong-keun's unseen works to light

Dansaekhwa master Yun Hyong-keun in 1980 / Courtesy of PKM GalleryBy Park Han-solDansaekhwa (monochrome painting) master Yun Hyong-keun (1928-2007) was often called “a painter of silence” when he was alive for his reserved nature. But that didn't mean he was unwilling to use his words or actions, especially when facing injustice.In 1956, he served six months in Seodaemun Prison for remaining in Seoul instead of joining the mass evacuation when North Korea invaded the South during the 1950-53 Korean War. After the April 19 Revolution in 1960 ― a series of nationwide protests following President Syngman Rhee's vote-rigging scandal ― he was forced to resign from his teaching position at Cheongju Girls' High School in North Chungcheong Province, due to his openly critical remarks against the administration.And in 1973, Yun was tortured and imprisoned yet again, while teaching at Sookmyung Girl's High School, for questioning the school's decision to illicitly enroll a student with the support of the then-head of the Korean Central Intelligence Agency. His “crime,”

Oct 29, 2021By Park Han-sol
Dansaekhwa exhibition, book bring Yun Hyong-keun's unseen works to light
Trends

CHA defers construction companies' revision plan near UNESCO-designated tomb

Site for Geomdan New Town in Incheon / Korea Times fileBy Park Ji-wonThe Cultural Heritage Administration (CHA) rejected Thursday a revised plan offered by construction companies for what it called the “illegal” building of an apartment complex near Jangneung Royal Tomb, a UNESCO-listed site dating back to the 17th century in Gimpo, Gyeonggi Province, asking the firms to submit a better one.The CHA Heritage Committee said that it would “defer” a final decision on the plan. “The plan cannot guarantee the preservation of the historic and cultural value of the heritage site,” it said in a statement. “So, the administration decided to defer a decision and will form another committee to discuss the issue further.”A deferral is the third-lowest in a four-tier system that includes "approval," "partial approval," "defer" and "not approved.”The move came after the CHA found out in May that the three firms ― Daebang Construction, Daekwang Construction and Kumsung Baekjoe ― had not undertaken the preliminary procedures required to build a st

Oct 28, 2021By Park Ji-won
CHA defers construction companies' revision plan near UNESCO-designated tomb
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - OCTOBER 29, 2021

Oct 28, 2021
DAILY FORTUNE - OCTOBER 29, 2021
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