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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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Trends

Talent shows become cash cow for news channel

gettyimagesbank Stars're born through TV Chosun shows, while the winners of other shows fade out.By Kang Hyun-kyungTV Chosun has hit another jackpot with its latest K-pop audition show. In its first episode, which aired on Thursday, the cable television channel's audition show, tentatively translated into English as, “Korea's Next K-Pop Star,” hit 16.1 percent in viewership, the highest among recent nighttime TV shows. The first round of the show saw 110 acts, including soloists and groups, competing. Like its previous trot audition shows, contestants who win all 13 judges' hearts advance automatically to the next round, while those who earn six votes or less are instantly eliminated. The judges meet to discuss the fates of the participants who win between seven and 12 votes, and with the consensus of the judges, some are given a second chance to compete again in the second round. A viewership of 4 percent for the rerun of the first episode during the weekend also c

Oct 11, 2021By Kang Hyun-kyung
Talent shows become cash cow for news channel
Arts & Theater

Korea National Contemporary Dance Company explores meanings of family in Asia

By Park Ji-wonThe poster for “My Family are Off-limits” / Courtesy of KNCDCThe Korea National Contemporary Dance Company (KNCDC) will present a set of dance works that explore the transformation and diverse forms of family in Confucianism-based Asian societies through the eyes of choreographers from Korea, Japan and Singapore.Under the overarching title of, “My Family are Off-limits,” the works, “♡,” by Lee Min-kyoung, ”Shut up Womb” by Shimojima Reisa and “The Last Puppet” by Kuik Swee Boon, will be presented from Nov. 19 to 21 at the Seoul Arts Center. The three dance performances will be performed by Korean dancers. “♡” explores the side of family relationships that both changes, and stays unchanging, in a rapidly transforming society that faces the coming digital future. With the question, “Where is our real ♡?,” the work asks, “Where can we find the intimacy and safety of family in this era where blood-related communities are becoming increasingly scarce?”In ”Shut up Womb,&rdquo

Oct 11, 2021By Park Ji-won
Korea National Contemporary Dance Company explores meanings of family in Asia
Others

DAILY FORTUNE - OCTOBER 11, 2021

Oct 10, 2021
DAILY FORTUNE - OCTOBER 11, 2021
Arts & Theater

Live music festivals announce lineups, gradually returning to regular concerts

The 16th Jarasum Jazz Festival / Courtesy of the Jarasum Jazz FestivalBy Park Ji-wonSince last year, following the start of the ban on large gatherings due to the spread of COVID-19, regular music festivals have been forced to hold online concerts or cancel their events. As concerts cannot be held outside of designated music halls, under the strict Level 4 distancing measures, which have been in place in the Seoul and surrounding metropolitan region until Oct. 14, outdoor music festivals have again met the same fate as last year, in which they must either be held online or cancel their events.However, as the number of vaccinated people in the country grows, along with the possibility of the introduction of eased distancing measures, amid the government's effort to introduce a "living with COVID-19" scheme by November, music festivals are gradually betting on being able to be held offline again.The organizer of the 18th Jarasum Jazz Festival, the country's biggest jazz festival, said it had delayed the event on the island that the festival is named after in Gyeonggi Province, from Oct

Oct 10, 2021By Park Ji-won
Live music festivals announce lineups, gradually returning to regular concerts
Books

'Moms,' unfiltered portrait of Korea's 'invisible' middle-aged women, wins Harvey Award

The covers of the Korean edition of “Moms,” by Ma Yeong-shin, left, and the English edition, translated by Janet Hong / Courtesy of Humanist and Drawn & Quarterly, respectivelyBy Park Han-solGraphic novelist Ma Yeong-shin's book, “Moms,” a darkly humorous tale of four middle-aged women who refuse to be reduced to invisible wives and moms, has won the Harvey Award for the Best International Book of the year.The Harvey Awards has celebrated quality comic books, graphic novels and manga since its establishment in 1988 to commemorate the literary achievements of Harvey Kurtzman (1924-1993), the American cartoonist, editor and pioneer of the genre.Among the five shortlisted contenders for the Best International Book category this year were Brecht Evans' “The City of Belgium,” Guy Delisle's “Factory Summers” and Michel Rabagliati's “Paul at Home.”“Moms” was first released in Korean in 2015 and was translated into English last year, with the aim of targeting the North American market through Canadian publisher Drawn

Oct 9, 2021By Park Han-sol
'Moms,' unfiltered portrait of Korea's 'invisible' middle-aged women, wins Harvey Award
Travel & Food

Singapore to allow entry of vaccinated travelers from Korea with no COVID-19 quarantine

People walk past an indoor waterfall at Jewel Changi Airport in Singapore, Oct. 7. Korea and Singapore agreed Friday to exempt or ease vaccinated travelers from mandatory quarantine upon arrival, in a step to help revitalize people-to-people exchanges between the two sides in the midst of the prolonged COVID-19 pandemic. Reuters-YonhapSouth Korea and Singapore agreed Friday to exempt or ease vaccinated travelers from mandatory quarantine upon arrival, in a major step to help revitalize people-to-people exchanges between the two sides in the midst of the prolonged COVID-19 pandemic, according to related ministries here Friday.Under the measure, effective from Nov. 15, passengers arriving in Singapore from South Korea will be exempt from the seven-day mandatory quarantine currently required by the Singaporean authorities. Seoul has already been allowing quarantine exemptions for vaccinated people coming in from most countries, including Singapore, but on limited grounds, such as humanitarian or other essential reasons, like family visits, business-related or public duties. Friday's dea

Oct 8, 2021
Singapore to allow entry of vaccinated travelers from Korea with no COVID-19 quarantine
Books

Chief executive calls for depositing Lee Kun-hee's donated manuscripts in national library

Suh Hye-ran, chief executive of the National Library of Korea, speaks during a government audit held at the National Assembly in Seoul, Thursday. Joint Press CorpsBy Park Han-solAmong the vast art collection donated to the National Museum of Korea (NMK) by the families of late Samsung Group Chairman Lee Kun-hee earlier this year, the ancient manuscripts should belong to the National Library of Korea (NLK), its chief executive, Suh Hye-ran, stated on Thursday.During the government audit of the National Assembly's Culture, Sports and Tourism Committee held in Yeouido, Seoul, Suh expressed concern that a large number of ancient documents now stored at the NMK's holding will “make it difficult for literary scholars and researchers to gain proper access to them.”In late April, the NMK became the biggest recipient of the Samsung's donation, securing a total of 21,693 artifacts. Among the massive art trove, more than a half of the items ― 12,558 relics, to be precise ― are books and manuscripts.Rep. Lee Che-ik of the conservative main opposition People Power Party (PPP), who ser

Oct 8, 2021By Park Han-sol
Chief executive calls for depositing Lee Kun-hee's donated manuscripts in national library
Arts & Theater

Asia Culture Week kicks off Friday

A scene from the musical “I am Koryoin” / Courtesy of ACCBy Park Ji-wonThe 2021 Asia Culture Week will be held under the theme of “empathy” at the Asia Culture Center (ACC) in Gwangju from Friday to Oct. 24, to promote cooperation among Asian countries. Poster for “Empathy, Asia” / Courtesy of ACCTitled, “Empathy, Asia,” the ACC's annual festival will present up to 12 programs online and offline.During this year's event, performances and exhibitions will be held promoting diversity, while an international forum and other events will take place on the sidelines.The musical “I am Koryoin,” which revisits the history of ethnic Koreans in the Soviet Union, will be performed on Oct. 9. The musical, made in 2020 by the ACC, focuses on the deportation of ethnic Koreans, who started to move to Russia in the 1860s, to central Asia in 1937. It premiered in 2017 at the ACC to mark the 80th anniversary of the forced migration.The pansori performance “The Two Eyes,” which is a reinterpretation of Simcheongga, one of the five

Oct 8, 2021By Park Ji-won
Asia Culture Week kicks off Friday
Arts & Theater

Korean National Ballet to present Balanchine's 'Jewels'

Members of the Korean National Ballet rehearse “Jewels” choreographed by George Balanchine in this undated photo. Courtesy of Korean National BalletBy Park Ji-wonPoster for the ballet “Jewels” / Courtesy of Korean National BalletThe Korean National Ballet (KNB) will showcase the full-length George Balanchine's “Jewels” for the first time in Korea. The KNB led by artistic director Kang Sue-jin will premiere the ballet choreographed by legendary choreographer and dancer Balanchine at the Seoul Arts Center from Oct. 20 to 24.The work consists of three acts with three different composers to express each jewel; Emeralds, or the first stage, is set to the music of Gabriel Faure; Rubies, or the second stage, to the music of Stravinsky; and Diamonds, or the third stage, to music by Tchaikovsky. The choreographer came up with the dance performance inspired by the artistry of jewelry designer Claude Arpels.It is the dancing of divertissement, which is a show of dancers' skill in a performance without advancing any plot or character development.“Of cour

Oct 8, 2021By Park Ji-won
Korean National Ballet to present Balanchine's 'Jewels'
Arts & Theater

Andy Warhol's rarely seen self-portraits arrive in Korea

Installation view of the exhibition “Andy Warhol: Looking for Andy” at Espace Louis Vuitton Seoul in Cheongdam in southern Seoul / Courtesy of Fondation Louis Vuitton & The Andy Warhol Foundation for Visual Arts, Inc. Licensed by Adagp, Paris 2021By Park Han-solAndy Warhol was a figure whose name always seemed to be followed by an endless list of iconic modifiers ― Pop Art legend, the Pygmalion of the contemporary world, as well as a screen printing artist who brought to life rows of vibrant Campbell's soup cans and movie star Marilyn Monroe's beaming face.A new exhibition called “Andy Warhol: Looking for Andy” at Espace Louis Vuitton Seoul, in the southern part of the capital, spotlights the series of Warhol's own self-portraits reflecting the trajectory of his dynamic life.The selected silkscreen prints and Polaroid photos, which come from the collection of the luxury brand's Paris art museum, Fondation Louis Vuitton, span over two decades from the late 1960s to the late 1980s and follow the pop icon as he staged persona after persona for himself.The ear

Oct 7, 2021By Park Han-sol
Andy Warhol's rarely seen self-portraits arrive in Korea
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