Explore Korea: A Visit To Grandfather's House: Seattle Asian Art Museum, Volunteer Park
Explore Korea: A Visit To Grandfather's House: Seattle Asian Art Museum, Volunteer Park
Explore Korea: A Visit To Grandfather's House: Seattle Asian Art Museum, Volunteer Park
Sarah Loudon, Senior Museum Educator Samuel Yum, Blakemore Intern Contributors: Suzanne Crowder Han Chung Hee Kim Denise Potrzeba Lett This exhibition is based on Explore Korea: A Visit to Grandfather House, which was s organized by The Newark Museum, Newark, New Jersey. Explore Korea has been made possible by a generous grant from the Korea Foundation. Additional support has been provided by PONCHO, the Nesholm Family Foundation, Seattle Art Museum Supporters (SAMS), and by a Seattle Public Schools World Language, Culture, and International Education Programs federal grant.
Table of Contents
Introduction Using This Unit Pre-visit Lesson 1: My Home, Your Home (Grades K2, 35) Did You Know? Pre-visit Background on Korean Household Architecture Student Worksheets Lesson 2: Fold a Paper House (Grades K5) Did You Know? Living Under a Straw Roof Lesson 3: Arrange Grandfather House (Grades K2) s Did You Know? From Grandfather House to High-Rise Apartments s Student Worksheets Lesson 4: Listen to Grandfather: Say and Write Korean Words (Grades 25) Did You Know? Han gul: The Korean Alphabet Korean Art at SAM: From the Men Quarters (Sarangbang) s Student Worksheets Lesson 5: Create a Fan Design (Grades K2) Did You Know? Buch ae A Fan for All Seasons Korean Art at SAM: On the Veranda (Maru) Student Worksheets Lesson 6: Create a Wrapping Cloth Design (Grades K2) Did You Know? Pojagi The Art of the Wrapping Cloth Korean Art at SAM: From the Women Quarters (Anbang) s Lesson 7: Picture This! Illustrate a Folk Tale (Grades 15) Folk Tale: The Queen Swallow Gift s Korean Art at SAM: From the Kitchen (Bu ok) Further Resources Korea Resources at the SAM Teacher Resource Center Selected Internet Resources for Teaching About Korea Resources for Teaching About Architecture Bibliography 1 2 5 8 11 17 19 21 23 27 31 34 37 39 53 55 56 57 61 64 65 67 71 76
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Introduction
Explore Korea: A Visit to Grandfather House is the first interactive exhibition for young s children and families at the Seattle Asian Art Museum. Visitors will take a journey to explore the daily lifestyle of a Korean family in Grandfather time. The exhibition s features an architectural setting based on a traditional Korean house, a display of Korean folk art, a mural by Seattle-area Korean-American artists, a videotape, and an art workshop space. Upon passing through the gateway of the wall around the courtyard area, visitors can explore the house exterior and view the videotaped story of a Korean-American family preparing to visit Grandfather in Korea. After removing their shoes, young visitors will be able to go inside the various rooms of the house to discover various objects and explore what activities take place there. Children are invited to try on traditional clothing, practice calligraphy, play a board game, and do some imaginary cooking in the kitchen! In the adjacent art workshop space, children ages five to ten will also be able to take part in a related craft activity and create an item inspired by the exhibition to take home. This exhibition has been made possible by a generous grant from the Korea Foundation. Additional support has been provided by PONCHO, the Nesholm Family Foundation, Seattle Art Museum Supporters (SAMS), King County Arts Commission and from a Seattle Public Schools World Language, Culture, and International Education Programs federal grant. Study in Korea by Museum staff for this project was made possible by the Korea Society and the Korea Foundation. Our warm thanks to the Community Advisory Committee members for their contributions to the project: Matthew Benuska, Ohm Cederberg, Soomin Chang, Hong-Jun Choi, Kay Hong, Chung Hee Kim, Hyang L. Kim, Jung Ho Kim, Sonja Kim, Hyon S. Lee, Moon Hyang Lee, Michelle Marshall, Patsy Surh O Connell, Hee Dai Park, Hye June Park, Cynthia Rekdal, Maria Seo, Ja-Eun Shin and Nahm-Kook Sun. Our thanks for suggestions and advice to Kathleen Peckham Allen, Betty Eng, Cathy Spagnoli, and Fred Wong. Many thanks to William J. Rathbun, Curator of Asian Art, for his work on this special exhibition.
Curriculum Connections
Seattle Public Schools Plan for the District One of the top six priorities of a world-class school district is study of language and culture. World Language, Culture, and International Education Programs Vision: To prepare all students to succeed in a global, multinational, interdependent world environment. Reason: Washington is the most trade-dependent state in the nation; Seattle, its international gateway. Multinational businesses and increased job opportunities with a global perspective will be the norm, not the exception. Those who speak the world s languages, can navigate across its cultures, and are trained to think with an international perspective will be sought after in the work world. . . . Outcomes/Expectations: Multilingual/multicultural education ensuring graduates will be proficient in at least two languages and skilled in working with culturally different people and communities. International Education Curriculum emphasizing activities, experiences, and programs with a global perspective. Experiences tied to international business and trade opportunities: -Multilevel exchange programs -International relations programs -Multiglobal interaction opportunities Submitted by Cynthia Rekdal; World Language, Culture, and International Education Programs; Seattle Public Schools
The primary focus of this unit is to address the following two Washington State Essential Academic Learning Requirements: Arts 4.4 recognize the influence of the arts in shaping and reflecting cultures and history Grade 4 benchmark: identify examples of the arts in a variety of contexts within a culture (ceremonial, utilitarian, decorative, political, entertainment, family/public/cultural) Geography 3.3 examine cultural characteristics, transmission, diffusion, and interaction Grade 4 benchmark: identify the ways cultural traditions are expressed through artistic creations and use of the environment for example art, clothing, and architecture
Washington State Arts Essential Learnings Focus The student will: 2.1 use the senses to gather and process information 4.4 recognize the influence of the arts in shaping and reflecting cultures and history Washington State Geography Essential Learnings Focus The student will: 3.3 examine cultural characteristics, transmission, diffusion, and interaction Washington State Mathematics Essential Learnings Focus The student will: 1.3 understand and apply concepts and procedures from geometric sense: shape and dimension The second part of this lesson asks for observations of Grandfather House, after seeing it s at the museum or on the museum web site. For classes without access, is there a family s or community member who can visit the classroom for an interview? Or, another alternative for teachers without these resources is to distribute the answer sheet to provide students with the information they need for making the comparison. Teacher prompts for leading a class discussion comparing students homes to Korean Grandfather House: s -In traditional Korea, did more family members live together? -Did more generations of a family live together? -Was there more separation between men and women? -In what ways are the rooms in the Korean house more flexible than those in your home? (For example, furniture is moved around and bedding is rolled up, so the same room can be dining room, living room, and bedroom.) -Is what ways are the rooms in your home more flexible? (For example, most rooms are used by all family members.)
Essential Question How do houses reflect differences in organization of activities and family relationships?
Generalization Cultural differences in household activities and family relationships can be observed by comparing household arrangements.
Description of Lesson Part 1. Students describe their room in a drawing and their house in words through a questionnaire (verbally as a group, or individually in writing). Part 2. Students compare their homes with a traditional Korean house. Target Learnings The student gathers information and compares the structure and organization of their own home to a traditional Korean house.
Resources Photos, SAM web site images, worksheets; optional: children books showing different s styles of houses (possibilities are listed in Further Resources).
Assessment Criteria The student: 1. Completed drawing and answers questions for their own room and house. 2. Completed questions for a Korean house. 3. Indicated similarities and differences between the two. Instructional Strategies Creative Process What the Teacher Does What the Student Does 1. Demonstrates drawing an x-ray view 1. Draws their bedroom and furnishings. of a room in a house (a section, with 2. Identifies from looking at drawings exterior wall removed to reveal what s where others sleep, play, read, or get inside). dressed. 2. Leads the class in drawing, as a group, 3. Completes questionnaire on their home. an x-ray view of the classroom. 4. Completes questionnaire for Korean Beginning with a rectangle, asks house. students to take turns adding elements 5. Compares results. Shares one similarity such as the blackboard, furniture, and one difference they found. Or marks windows, and doors, and discussing on their sheets which elements are the where to place them. same and which are different. Offers 3. Directs students in drawing an x-ray possible explanations for any differences view (or section) of their bedroom and they found. what is inside. Leads class discussion to compare the results. 4. Guides students in extending from their room to outlining information on their home (house, apartment, or trailer) using the questionnaire (K2, verbally as a group; 35, individually in writing). Keeps the results to compare with Korean Grandfather s House. 5. Asks students to recall Korean Grandfather House from s MuseumVisit, or shows images of Korean houses (either online or via
transparencies), and has students complete the second parallel questionnaire for Grandfather House. s Assessment Strategies Constructed response to student questionnaires Vocabulary Roofline, men quarters, women s s quarters, courtyard, veranda, ondol floor, ancestors, tile, x-ray drawing or section drawing, clay, plaster
Evidence of Student Learning Two questionnaires marked to show similarities and differences Life Applications Student is able to analyze and compare cultural traditions through living spaces.
Possible extension: Extend to discussion of animal shelters (possibly using a children s book such as Need a House? Call Ms. Mouse) or houses in other cultures (possibly using one of the children books with a cultural perspective on architecture listed in Further s Resources).
Through Explore Korea: A Visit to Grandfather's House, the Seattle Asian Art Museum presents its version of the traditional-style Korean houses that continue to dot the countryside of the Korean peninsula. While Korean architectural styles vary from region to region, through time, and across social classes, certain structural elements are recognized as unique to Korea. Korean houses also reflect a distinct conception and use of space that can be seen even in the apartment households of today's growing urban centers as well as in Korean communities outside Korea. The Museum installation has been carefully designed with these aspects in mind. It is intended to serve not as a model or replica home but as an interpretive context for the introduction of Korea's artistic and cultural heritage and for the simulation of its rich domestic experience. Traditional Korean houses are single-story dwellings made of wood, stone, and clay or mud plaster. As with other Korean houses of this style and scale, Grandfather House is s enclosed by a gated wall that separates it from neighboring houses and forms a courtyard. Tiled roofs, now a familiar sight, were once a sign of wealth and an indication of upperclass (yangban) status. The roofs, covered with curved tiles, gave these houses an upward tilt at their corners, lending them what some have described as a "smiling air." Commonershouses were roofed with thatch made from rice straw: long, overlapping rolls of thatch were piled to form a solid, weatherproof roof. Thatched-roof houses have all but disappeared in Korea, but the image of their rounded forms with neatly trimmed edges remains in the hearts of many Koreans, evoking feelings of nostalgia.
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Another feature of the Korean house was a central heating system called ondol. For centuries Koreans heated their homes with ondol floors: brick floors with a built-in network of ducts and flues leading from the kitchen hearth. The floors of interior rooms were layered with oiled paper on which household members would go about their daily activities. During warmer seasons, flues could be closed and the kitchen heat directed outside through chimneys made of stone or clay. Korean winters can be wet and cold, however, so it is little wonder that Koreans took their meals, entertained guests, and slept directly on the warmth of their floors! Except for the kitchen, rooms within the house were not completely closed off from another by heavy walls or doors with hinges and knobs, as in our own homes. Rather, they might have been partially divided by walls with open doorways or removable sliding doors. In this way, rooms were able to serve a variety of purposes. During the course of a day, a single room might function as a dining room, living room, playroom, and study. Cushions and mats made of cotton, silk, and plant fiber made sitting on the floor comfortable. Korean tables and desks are low and portable, and chests and shelves are also generally small and lightweight in construction. In the evening, objects and furniture would be pushed against the walls, and bedding and quilts spread out over the floor. After a good night rest, the bedding would be folded up and stowed back in a corner or piled s high atop a blanket chest. Floors were kept immaculately clean, and of course shoes were taken off before entering these interior rooms. Korea late Choson period (13921910) was marked by a conservatism that fostered a s strict separation of roles and activities for men and women. This extended even to the level of individual family homes. In households such as Grandfather House, the sarangbang, s or receiving room, often served as the public men quarters, while the anbang, or inner s room, made up the more protected women quarters. In larger home complexes, the man s s quarters and woman quarters were often in entirely different buildings. In the men s s quarters of Grandfather House, also referred to as a study room, objects and furnishings s reflect the lifestyle of a Korean gentleman. These include a low desk with inkstone and calligraphy box, shelves and chests for holding books and scrolls and objects of scholarly curiosity, a charcoal brazier, and screens adorned with classical Chinese texts and images. Items within the women quarters of Grandfather House tell the story of a Korean s s woman of years past. These include a chest for her clothes and blankets, a wedding box
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used for her dowry, a sewing kit with swatches of her embroidered handwork, and perhaps a painted screen with the familiar bird and flower motif. Young children often stayed within the women quarters and kitchen area, close to their mothers. Boys might move to s other rooms associated with the sarangbang upon reaching the proper age, perhaps when beginning formal schooling. Girls, on the other hand, would stay in areas close to the anbang and kitchen, where they could learn the practical skills of stocking the food stores, cooking, ironing, and mending clothes. In Grandfather House, the sarangbang and anbang are separated by a wood-floored s section called the maru. This area is covered by the roof, or at least by the overhanging eaves of the roof, but is without outside walls, as was typical. Sometimes the maru area had paper-screen window or wall panels that protected it during cold or wet weather, but were removed and hung from the ceiling rafters during fair weather. In fact, we can imagine that the maru area, or veranda, was a favorite spot in the house in the summertime, when the roof above provided shade and the open walls allowed a welcome breeze. Since the other rooms had no closet space, the maru area sometimes served as a storage space, in addition to more practical attics and cellars. Rice chests and other units for holding valuable food grains were commonly placed in the maru, the symbolic center of the household. As in Grandfather House, the kitchen of a traditional Korean house stood at the far end s next to the anbang, so that those within the inner room could enjoy the warmest benefits of its hearth through the ondol floors. This also provided quick and easy access to the kitchen for the woman of the household, whose responsibilities included preparing meals, heating water, and maintaining the fire. Unlike other portions of the house, the kitchen was floored only with packed earth. An embankment of stone and plaster was built not only to contain the fire but also to hold the iron cooking pots above it, forming an effective stovetop. Also in the kitchen of Grandfather House are shelves holding ceramic bowls and plates, fiber s mats and baskets, gourd dippers and scoops, a millstone, and a mortar and pestle. Many of these objects, along with low food serving tables and trays, can be seen hanging from the kitchen walls and rafters. An extension of the kitchen stretches outside to a place reserved for food storage jars. This area, sometimes called a condiment bay, is one of the most familiar sights in Korean households, whether in the yards of older country homes or on rooftops and balconies in downtown Seoul. These clusters of large earthenware jars represent one of the most distinctive aspects of Korean culture, one that people around the world have come to recognize and enjoy: Korean food! Within this bay in Grandfather House we can s imagine crocks of pickled radishes and cabbages, soybean paste and soy sauce, red pepper paste, sesame seed oil, and the many other seasonings and sauces that give Korean food its trademark flavor. Join us as we step inside the gate to Grandfather House for a closer look at the arts and s activities of Korean living!
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Name____________________
Date______________________
My home is: ____________________________________________________________. The roof is this shape ____________________________________________________ and is made from _________________________________________________________. Some things right outside my home are _______________________________________. The windows are made of __________________________________________________. The shape of the windows is ________________________________________________. What room do you keep food in? ________________________________________ What room do you eat in? ______________________________________________ What do you sit on? ___________________________________________________ Where do you play? ___________________________________________________ What room do you read and write in? ________________________________________ What room do you sleep in? __________________What do you sleep on? ___________ The rooms that men and boys usually use are __________________________________. The rooms that women and girls usually use are ________________________________. Where do you like to sit to keep cool when it is hot? _________________________ Where do you like to sit to keep warm when it is cold? _______________________
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Name _______________________
Date _______________________
My home is: __________________________________________________. The roof is this shape ____________ and is made from ________________. Some things right outside my home are _____________________________. The windows are made of __________. The shape of the windows is __________. The parts of our house with special decoration are __________________________. The places where we hang or display art are _______________________________. What room do you keep food in? ____________What room do you eat in? ___________ What do you sit on? ______________Where do you play? ________________________ What room do you read and write in? ______________________________ What room do you sleep in? __________________What do you sleep on?___________ The rooms that men and boys usually use are _______________________. The rooms that women and girls usually use are ______________________. Is there a difference? _______________________ The house is heated by ______________________. Where do you like to sit to keep cool when it is hot? _____________________________ Where do you like to sit to keep warm when it is cold? ___________________________
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Name _______________________
Date _______________________
At Grandfather House in Korea, s The roof is this shape ______________and is made from Some things outside Grandfather House are s The windows are made of The shape of the windows is Where do they keep food? Where do they eat? What do they sit on? Where do they play? Where do they read and write? Where do they sleep? What do they sleep on? The rooms that men and boys usually use are The rooms that women and girls usually use are Is there a difference? Where do they like to sit to keep cool when it is hot? Where do they like to sit to keep warm when it is cold? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
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Name _______________________
Date _______________________
At Grandfather House in Korea, s The roof is this shape_____________ and is made from ____________. Some things outside Grandfather House are _________________________________ s ______________________________________________________________________. The windows are made of _______________. The shape of the windows is _________. The parts of the house with special decoration are __________________________. The places where art is hung or displayed are _________________________________. What kind of art? ______________________________________________ Where do they keep food? ______________ Where do they eat? ________________ What do they sit on? __________________ Where do they play? _______________ Where do they read and write? ___________________________________________ Where do they sleep? __________________ What do they sleep on? _____________ The rooms that men and boys usually use are ______________________________. The rooms that women and girls usually use are ____________________________. Is there a difference? __________________________ The house is heated by _________________________. Where do they like to sit to keep cool when it is hot? ________________________ Where do they like to sit to keep warm when it is cold? ______________________
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the front door. 3. Directs students to color the drawing (optional) and cut it out, fold to create the projecting eaves and wooden floor veranda, fold the step under, and cut and glue on the door to open. 4. Demonstrates gluing to background paper. Glue the walls down first. When folded, the eaves and veranda will project out from the page. Align the veranda, then glue down the base of the columns. Glue down the back end of the step. 5. Suggests that students draw something that can be seen inside, through the cut-open front door, roof, gourds, eaves, walls, columns, door, veranda, step, base of the columns. 6. Asks students to label (or, for K1, verbally identify) the parts of their house. Assessment Strategies Constructed response identifying parts of the house Vocabulary Two-dimensional, three-dimensional, roofline, thatched roof, gourds, eaves, veranda, columns, base of columns, clay, plaster
Evidence of Student Learning Verbal or written identification of the parts of the house exterior Life Applications Student can identify major exterior elements of traditional domestic architecture.
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While tile-roof houses were built by upperclass families that could afford to do so, most families lived in houses with thatched roofs. Long, overlapping rolls of thatch made from rice straw were piled to form a solid, weatherproof roof. The thick layers of straw worked as good insulation for keeping the house warm in the winter and cool in the summer. Thatched-roof houses have now all but disappeared from Korea, but a few folk villages are maintained for visitors to experience. Naturally, the commonersthatched-roof houses were smaller than the tile-roof houses and had fewer rooms sometimes simply one room and a storeroom. However, even the small thatched-roof houses had a courtyard surrounded by a stone wall. When a family fortunes s improved, or a son married and his wife came to live with him and his parents, additional rooms or wings were added on. The rooms generally had the same names and similar arrangement and functions as in the tile-roof houses: men quarters (sarangbang), s women quarters (anbang), veranda (maru), and courtyard. s Depending on the local materials available, thatched-roof houses were built with stone and wood, or with a wooden framework and earthen walls. Some were built with logs, somewhat like log cabins. A house thatched roof almost became part of the garden, as families grew gourds (like s small pumpkins) over it. Resting on the straw roof, the vines had room to sprawl and ripen in the sun instead of lying on the muddy earth. Gourds provided food in the past, but have other uses too. After picking the gourds, the shells were cut in half, then kept and dried to use as scoops. Sometimes, these gourd ladles were hung on the outside or kitchen walls of the house.
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Washington State Arts Essential Learnings Focus The student will: 4.4 recognize the influence of the arts in shaping and reflecting cultures and history Washington State Geography Essential Learnings Focus The student will: 3.3 examine cultural characteristics, transmission, diffusion, and interaction Washington State Communication Essential Learnings Focus The student will: 1.2 listen and observe to gain and interpret information 3.2 Work cooperatively as a member of a small group Essential Question How does the design and organization of Korean Grandfather House reflect daily s life activities? Description of Lesson Students sort and place household items within five areas of the provided house diagram. Target Learnings The student applies their understanding of the functions of the areas of a Korean house by placing household items within a diagram. Generalization Traditional interior design and furnishings reflect a culture household activities. s
Assessment Criteria The student: 1-5. Placed household items correctly in one to five areas of the house.
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Instructional Strategies What the Teacher Does 1. Leads discussion of activities that take place in each area of a Korean house, referring to Museum visit or web site images. Kitchen: Cooking, bathing Women quarters: Sleeping, dressing, s sewing, child care, children games, s reading and writing for girls Courtyard: Food storage (bean paste), food preparation, children play area, s drying clothes on a clothesline, growing plants Men quarters: Entertaining (male) s visiting friends and relatives, reading, writing, painting, creating calligraphy, eating, sleeping Veranda: cooling off in hot weather, some food storage (rice chest) 2. Directs students, in small groups of 45, to sort household items by area of the house. Assessment Strategies Constructed response to sorting using diagram Vocabulary Exterior, interior, veranda, courtyard, men quarters, women quarters, s s ceramic jars, bean paste, fabric purse, calligraphy brushes, fan, rice chest
Creative Process What the Student Does 1. Cuts out pictures of items (bean paste jars, small fabric purse, hanging calligraphy brushes, stove, fan) and pastes them in the appropriate place within the diagram. 2. Optional: Adds drawings of people outside to show some of the activities taking place in the courtyard.
Evidence of Student Learning Completed house diagram Life Applications Student is able to organize objects according to their use.
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At the end of the 19th century, a Western observer of Korea noted that etiquette [forbade] . . . the erection of two-storied houses. . . . [C]onsequently an estimated quarter of a million people [were] living on ground, and, from the hills above, the capital city of Seoul the appeared as a sea of low brown roofs. Single-story houses remained the norm until the 1960s, when apartment complexes began to be built. Today, the skyline of Seoul is a sea of high-rise apartment buildings, housing many of its 11 million people. Despite the Western appearance of these high-rises from the outside, the use of space within is uniquely Korean. Many features of the layout of the traditional Korean house have been incorporated into the design of the modern apartment. At the same time, changes in the use of these traditional features reflect changes in family relations. A traditional Korean house in its full form consisted of two L-shaped wings placed so that together they formed a rectangle or square and enclosed a madang, or courtyard. The inside wing was the female quarters. It included the anbang (inside room), an adjacent kitchen, and, at a right angle, the konnonbang (the room across the maru from the anbang). The maru, which separated the anbang and konnonbang, was a covered, woodenfloor area open to the courtyard, and, according to another observer, a ceremonial center of the household and a fine place to sit under the shade of its roof in the hot summer days. The outside wing included the male quarters, or sarangbang. The outside wing was also where the main gate was located. Poorer and lower-status families had smaller houses that did not include two fully developed wings. The existence of a separate outer wing was the sign of a richer or higher-status family. The poorest might have had only one room. A typical modern, middle- or upper-middle-class high-rise apartment is rectangular in shape. In a four-bedroom apartment, there is one room in each corner of the rectangle: two near (and separated by) the front door and two on the opposite corners of the apartment. In a three-bedroom apartment, there is only one room near the door, and in a two-bedroom, none. The front door is the equivalent of the main gate of a traditional house. The rooms near the front door are called sarangbang, just as were the male quarters of the outer wing of the traditional house. The two rooms on the opposite side of the apartment are called anbang and konnonbang, after the names of the rooms of the traditional female quarters, or inner wing. A bathroom and/or hallway may separate these two rooms. Today, the term maru is used to refer to the open (but covered) space between the rooms of the outer wing (near the front door) and the inner wing, replacing the uncovered courtyard. The maru is divided between a living room area and a dining area. The kitchen is now adjacent to the konnonbang, bordering the dining area. Opposite the kitchen and bordering the living room area is generally a sliding glass door opening onto a veranda, which may also be called a madang, or courtyard. Small verandas may also be found on either side of the kitchen,
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forming the outer wall of the konnonbang and sarangbang. Food jars traditionally found in the courtyard can be stored on the veranda. Even though the layout of the modern apartment and even the terminology of different rooms are reminiscent of the traditional house, there have been some changes in the use of space, which reflect changes in social relations. The most significant change involves the anbang, or inner wing, and the relationships between men and women and between generations. In the past, the bond between parents and children was more important than that between husband and wife. This was reflected in the fact that a bride and groom did not meet until their wedding day, and even after marriage usually slept, ate, and entertained separately, the husband with his older sons in the sarangbang and the wife with her daughters and young sons in the anbang. Today, men and women have more say in whom they marry, the marital bond is more important, and husband and wife sleep together. Families now often eat and socialize together in the maru, or living and dining room areas. Older children have their own rooms, either in the konnonbang or sarangbang, while preschool children sleep together with their parents. --Denise Lett, Ph.D., Department of Anthropology, University of Washington
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Washington State Arts Essential Learnings Focus The student will: 1.2 organize arts elements into artistic compositions recognize the influence of the arts in shaping and reflecting cultures and history Washington State Geography Essential Learnings Focus The student will: examine cultural characteristics, transmission, diffusion, and interaction Essential Question How can I create a work of calligraphy by writing Korean words? Description of Lesson Students learn to write a few words in Korean han script, then write them gul with a brush. Target Learning The student creates calligraphy by writing Korean words with attention to elements of line and space. Generalization Carefully written and positioned words create a work of calligraphy. Resources Handouts for Korean words with English pronunciation for numbers 1-10, grandfather, house; handout on han gul writing system Assessment Criteria The student: 1. Accurately wrote two Korean words, reproducing the number and direction of strokes in the diagram. 2. Wrote the words in alignment. 3. Used a single brushstroke to create each line of a character. 4. Wrote with consideration of space and placement on the page.
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Instructional Strategies What the Teacher Does 1. Leads discussion of the Korean writing system, which employs symbols for syllables, using the handout. How is this different from the English alphabet? Discusses positioning of syllables and the change from the traditional vertical right-toleft orientation to the more recent horizontal left-to-right arrangement. 2. Directs students in completing the worksheet to identify a couple of syllables among the word examples given in the handouts. 3. Models stroke order and stroke direction for writing sample words. 4. Demonstrates folding paper into squares to practice writing sample words with a pencil. 5. Demonstrates using a brush to practice with paint or ink, making each stroke of a character with a single brushstroke, and picking up the brush to make the next line. On the diagrams, each number represents one stroke; for example, the word four has six strokes. 6. For final piece, demonstrates how to consider placement without folding the paper, planning the spacing of words so that they are relatively the same size, in horizontal alignment, with space at the top and bottom of the paper. What happens if you don t leave enough room? Assessment Strategies Performance-based assessment of student visual art work Vocabulary Brush, calligraphy, line, space, positive and negative space, script, han script gul
Creative Process What the Student Does 1. Practices writing several words in pencil. 2. Practices writing several words with a brush and black paint or ink. 3. Writes two words as a finished product, with attention to the relationship between the words, spacing, alignment, and placement on the page.
Evidence of Student Learning Final page of calligraphy Life Applications Student is aware of alternative writing systems (a syllabary) and art forms using a writing script (calligraphy and graphic design).
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Possible extension: In other current classroom work, substitute the Korean numbers for the numbers 1-10. Or mount the studentswork on colored paper in the format of a hanging scroll (individually) or as a folding screen (8-10 studentswork joined, with folds between them).
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Han the Korean alphabet, is one of the greatest treasures to Koreans around the world. gul, It was developed more than five hundred years ago by a team of Korean scholars during the reign of King Sejong the Great (14181450) of the Choson dynasty. It has been called one of the most scientific writing systems in use today in any language. Koreans speak a unique language, different from Chinese, Japanese, and other languages of East Asia. Throughout centuries of close ties between Korea and China, however, many written and spoken Chinese words have been introduced to Koreans and incorporated into their language. Long before han was developed, difficult Chinese characters provided gul the only tools for writing. Even today, Chinese ideographs are sometimes mixed with han in Korean textbooks, newspapers, and magazines. gul At the time when King Sejong decided that the people of Korea should have their own system of writing, Korean scholars were immersed in studying classical Chinese histories, poetry, and religious texts. But because learning Chinese required long years of study, only the most highly educated people, usually men of the wealthy yangban class of landowners, were able to read and write. It was the hope of King Sejong that all Koreans would one day be able to express themselves through writing letters and verses, and enjoy reading scriptures in their own language. While the goal of widespread literacy in Korea has been reached only in the past century, Korea king set forth this ideal long ago. s Today, han is used much as it was originally devised. It is a phonetic system gul comprising fourteen consonants and ten vowels. Words are written in syllables as they sound, unlike written Chinese, in which an individual character can represent an entire word or thought. While han letters may resemble the brushstrokes of Chinese gul characters, their forms are designed to mirror the shapes made by the human mouth, tongue, and throat when uttering these sounds. For example, the symbol. for the letter k or g depicts the angle of the tongue blocking the back of the throat. Han may be gul written vertically from top to bottom in columns, which are then read from right to left. It is also common, however, to see han written horizontally from left to right in rows, gul just as we read and write in English.
Calligraphy
Calligraphy is the art of the written word. In places such as Korea, China, and Japan, this art has been practiced for centuries using brush and ink. It amounts to far more than just good handwriting, as great calligraphers can use the elements of line and space to create visually captivating and emotionally expressive compositions. Sometimes the result is a powerful work of art.
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The ability to read and write was a very special skill in the past, available to only a privileged few. Great calligraphers would have been celebrated as much as great painters and poets, and the greatest of artists would have excelled in all three art forms. In Korea, training in calligraphy was part of an upper-class gentleman education, along with s learning the Chinese classics. Calligraphers would have worked in Chinese characters, but examples of han calligraphy attest to a distinct tradition. Brush, ink, inkstone, scrolls, gul books all these tools of traditional learning and scholarship can be found in the sarangbang, or men quarters, of Grandfather House! s s
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Mun are commonly referred to as document chests, though it has been suggested gap that this term is slightly misleading. A more appropriate term might refer to the scrolls of paper, brushes, inkstones, and other tools of calligraphy that the low chests housed and that the actual name in Korean and Chinese characters indicates mun, denoting things pertaining to culture or cultural life, and gap, translating as chest. A proper yangban scholar would have regular use for such furniture, as a great portion of his time was spent in his quarters immersed in letters. Mun often occur in pairs set side by side and gap flanked by tall narrow shelves. The L-shaped openings provided easy access to scrolls and perhaps served as display areas for curiosities such as rocks, flowering plants, and foreign objects. This piece, though decorated with mitered trim and a sculpted skirt, maintains the Confucian aesthetic of sophistication and simplicity befitting a gentleman quarters. s Similar paired mun gap, smaller in scale and more highly decorated, might be found in the women quarters. s
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Album leaf (Landscape with a man sitting under a tree) Korean, late 19th century Choson period (13921910) Cho Suk jin (So-rim 18531918) Ink on paper h. 11 in., w. 10 in. Gift of Frank S. Bayley III 91.39.2
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Name _______________________
Date _______________________
Find the syllable that makes the sound ah in two different words. Ah looks like this:
means no consonant
__________________
________________________
means: __________________
means: ________________________
Now, look for the vowel sound ah combined with a consonant. Write the syllable:
___________________________________________________________
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Target Learnings The student uses organic shapes in contrasting colors to create a composition in a fan format.
Instructional Strategies What the Teacher Does 1. Shares and discusses background information. 2. Reviews organic shapes (with
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curvilinear edges) by identifying examples in the room. 3. Looks at the comma shapes of t aeguk design; what kind of curving edges does it have? 4. Demonstrates cutting three comma shapes and placing them together to make the t aeguk. How is this balanced? What does it mean? (balance of heaven, earth, and man) 5. Demonstrates combining larger organic shapes in primary colors to create a composition in the shape of the fan frame. Primary colors are contrasting colors; what would be other contrasting colors? What would not be contrasting colors (such as three shades of red)? Your different shapes will show up very well in contrasting colors. 6. Asks students how they will use their fans. Assessment Strategies Performance-based assessment of visual art work Vocabulary Fan, curving lines/curvilinear edges, t aeguk, organic shapes, composition, primary colors, contrasting colors
3. 4.
5.
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make a t aeguk design or their own design. Selects shapes and contrasting colors to combine. Positions and glues down shapes within a fan shape on the provided pattern; cuts out the fan along its outer edge. Traces and cuts out two fan frames from lightweight cardboard. Inserts a craft stick between the two pieces of cardboard; glues or staples them together to make a handle for the fan. Decides on the use of their fan for some function, for decoration, or both.
Evidence of Student Learning Fan design Life Applications Student recognizes how and why utilitarian objects can also serve an expressive function. Student recognizes t aeguk design as a visual element of Korean culture.
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Mat (hwamunsok) Korean, 20th century Woven sedge grass l. 104 in., w. 71 in. Gift of Helen and Marshall Hatch 92.153
Hwamunsok, or flower decorated mat, is the general Korean term for traditional sedge grass mats typically adorned with floral patterns and bird and animal motifs in bright colors. This mat bears a conjugal pair of cranes signifying fidelity and longevity. Above and below the interlocking cranes are the Chinese characters for double happiness and a surrounding cloud scroll pattern enhances the bold geometric and symmetrical design. Hwamunsok continue to be used today, especially as summer floor coverings as the fibers absorb moisture but remain smooth and cool to the touch. This mat was woven by an artist from Kanghwa Island, one of three areas noted in late Choson period (1392-1910) administrative records for producing the finest hwamunsok.
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Target Learnings The student positions geometric shapes and colors to create a balanced composition.
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Instructional Strategies What the Teacher Does 1. Shares and discusses background information on the function and design of wrapping cloths. 2. Reviews geometric shapes by identifying examples in the room. 3. Looks at example of pojagi (wrapping cloth) and discusses how it creates balance. (Prompts: Are all the pieces of a single color in the same section of the piece? Which pojagi uses a repeated pattern? How can a composition be balanced without a repeated pattern? Some are symmetrical two halves or four quadrants are mirror images of one another; others repeat shapes and colors without using an exact repeated pattern.) 4. Demonstrates how to experiment with positioning of pieces by moving them around on the paper before gluing them down. 5. Demonstrates finishing: For pieces made with fabric scraps, add two ribbon ties, 24 inches long, to the muslin side of the completed project. Attach the ribbon in an X pattern to the center with glue. 6. Looks at student work as a group. What different solutions are evidenced? Assessment Strategies Performance-based assessment of visual art work Vocabulary Textile, wrapping cloth (pojagi), patchwork, geometric shape, balanced composition, repeated pattern, symmetry
Creative Process What the Student Does 1. Identifies shapes made with straight lines. 2. Cuts straight edges to create geometric shapes, or sorts out and creates geometric shapes from scraps. 3. Experiments with different arrangements on backing. 4. Decides on a final composition when balance is achieved. 5. Glues down shapes. 6. Shares work with classmates, distinguishing between symmetry, repeated pattern, and balance.
Evidence of Student Learning Student work includes geometric shapes in a balanced composition. Life Applications Student recognizes elements of visual composition and cultural tradition in domestic/functional art forms.
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Possible extension: As a class, collect and display samples of what Grandmother made, other textile pieces made from fabric scraps, or other art objects made from recycled materials.
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Why use a wrapping cloth? Koreans have shared the belief that by carefully wrapping or covering an object, blessings may be captured or bestowed through that object. For centuries, pojagi have been fashioned of cloth material not only to protect possessions and gifts, but also to secure general good fortune. Pojagi are thus multipurpose, ranging from coverings and pouches for ceremonial items to wrappings for clothes and bedding to covers for meals and table settings. How are wrapping cloths made? Pojagi vary in size and materials according to their intended use, but are generally square or rectangular in shape. Popular materials of silk, gossamer, cotton, and ramie are used in bright shades of red, purple, blue, green, yellow, pink, and white. Some pojagi are lined, others padded or quilted. Decorative techniques include embroidery (designs sewn on with thick colored thread), painting, and, on occasion, gold leaf appliqu (gluing on very thin pieces of gold). How are designs created with patchwork? Among the pojagi best appreciated today are those pieced together from scraps of fabric left over from clothing or quilts. These patchwork wrapping cloths, or chogak po, are remarkable for their intricate stitching, their use of balanced and contrasting colors, and their abstract geometric compositions. In viewing patchwork cloths in recent museum exhibitions and catalogues, there is little wonder that curators and writers discover a modern aesthetic sensibility some even finding parallels to the work of Piet Mondrian (18721944) and Paul Klee (18791940). What do wrapping cloths tell us about the women who made them? As much as chogak po demonstrate a refinement of Korean artistic concerns, wrapping cloths tell a broad story of Korean society and culture. These are the works of anonymous women who, through much of the Choson period (13921910), had few avenues for personal expression. Most were secluded from the public realm, and a woman close s companions were said to include needle and thread, a thimble, a ruler, and a pair of scissors. Woven into the fabric of their cloths are individual pictures of resourcefulness, creativity, and exuberance of spirit. Source: Kumja Paik Kim and Huh Dong-hwa, in Profusion of Color: Korean Costumes and Wrapping Cloths of the Choson Dynasty (Seoul: Asian Art Museum of San Francisco and Museum of Korean Embroidery, 1995).
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Wrapping cloth (pojagi) Korean, 20th century Ramie cloth in patchwork design l. 31 in., w. 33 in. Purchased with funds from the estate of Pauline King Butts 93.164
Pojagi are wrapping cloths created by Korean women for the purpose of covering and protecting objects, but they are also an expressive means for packing good wishes. The practice of stitching together cloth and elaborating its surface with embroidered, painted, or patchwork designs runs deep in Korean traditions as deep as the belief that by carefully wrapping an object, one can convey one blessings, honor, and respect along with that s object. This particular pojagi is a fine example of chogak po, or pieces pojagi. In the past these patchwork cloths were sewn together from scrap material to be used as ordinary wrapping cloths for everyday objects. Recently, however, chogak po have been admired even above the traditionally esteemed embroidered pojagi for their complex designs and color schemes that appeal to the modern eye. Today Korean women continue to produce these cloths for practical use, but they also know that they are actively engaged in a contemporary creative process.
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Kitchen
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Essential Question How can I create a folk tale illustration showing its household setting? Description of Lesson Students read and illustrate a Korean folk tale. Target Learnings The student illustrates a story incident within its household setting.
Generalization Folk tale words and illustrations can be enriched by the details of a setting. Resources Handout of folk tale The Queen Swallow s Gift, images of Korean houses, drawing materials Assessment Criteria 1. The student drew an illustration of an incident from the Korean folk tale. 2. The illustration depicts the house as its general setting (includes walls, roof, or other general feature). 3. The illustration depicts the appropriate part of the house as its setting (includes household or courtyard items specific to one area).
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Instructional Strategies What the Teacher Does 1. Reads, or has students read, the Korean folk tale with discussion of the household setting at the places indicated by an asterisk. 2. Guides students in recalling events from the story and putting them in proper sequence. 3. Guides students in choosing an incident from the story to illustrate in a setting of a part of the house. For K2: students choose a favorite incident from the story as a group. For 3-5: Students choose their own event individually. 4. Explains that students should draw the event in its setting, and discuss visual elements that can be included in the drawing to create this setting. 5. Guides students in drawing their story event in the center of their page, reminding them to leave some space around it to draw in the setting. 6. Suggest that students begin by drawing some part of the house (such as door, walls, or roof), and then add a household item. 7. Compare results. How did different drawings show the event? Show the setting? Assessment Strategies Performance-based assessment of visual art work Vocabulary Folk tale, sequence, setting, space, auspicious, eaves, gourd, silk, brocade
Creative Process What the Student Does 1. Listens to story and identifies which part of the house or what type of house (thatched-roof or tile-roof) is involved for specific incidents; names some of the contents of the rooms. 2. Recalls events from the story in sequence. 3. Draws or positions story characters within a household setting. 4. Draws details to indicate a specific location within the household setting.
Life Applications Student can visualize settings from text. Student can use key selected visual elements to represent a larger whole.
Possible extension: If enough students have illustrated different episodes, their work can be put together into a set of storytelling cards. Students can take turns retelling the story while showing the illustrations. Or compare versions of the story. A different version is included on the audiotape Tales of Korea by Cathy Spagnoli (New York: The Korea Society, 1994) and on the Explore Korea
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page of the Museum web site. In this version, a talking turtle takes the place of the s swallow; the tape teaches and then uses the Korean words for family members and the numbers 15. The version of the story with the swallow has also been published with the title The Grateful Swallow, in Korea for Children: A Treasure of Legends, Myths and Heroes, vol. 2 (Seoul: Daihak Publishing, 1982), and Hungbu Nolbu: Two Brothers and Their Magic Gourds, in Korean Folk Stories for Children, series II (Seoul: Seoul International Tourist Publishing, 1981).
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Note: At the points marked with an asterisk (*) in the story, pause to consider which area of the house this episode takes place in.
Hung-bu and Nol-bu were brothers. They and their families lived together with their elderly father, a wealthy landowner. Nol-bu was the oldest. One day the brothers were called to their father bedside. My sons, he said in a raspy s voice, it is time for me to leave this world. I want the two of you and your families to live in harmony together, sharing everything equally. That is all I ask. After a few moments of labored breathing, he closed his eyes and died. Hung-bu and Nol-bu buried him on a mountain slope beneath their house. It was an auspicious spot overlooking a stream. As soon as they returned home from the burial ceremony, Nol-bu searched his father room and took everything of value he could find.* s [Break for teacher prompt: what part of the house is that, and what would he find there?] From that day on, Nol-bu and his wife treated Hung-bu and his family like servants. Hungbu wife had to do all the cooking, cleaning and washing, and his children had to do all s the chores and run all the errands. Nol-bu family ate first and Hung-bu family had to s s make do with the leftovers. If Hung-bu children cried for more food, Nol-bu wife s s would slap them and say they had eaten more than their share. Then one day Nol-bu wife said to him, Those brats of Hung-bu are going to be the s s ruin of us. What that? The ruin of us? asked Nol-bu. s Those kids of Hung-bu They eat so much there is never anything left. They going to s. re be the ruin of us. Then I guess I just have to do something about them, replied Nol-bu, frowning and ll stroking his chin. Hung-bu! he screamed after a few minutes. Come here! I want to see you at once! Hung-bu hurried to the open hall* [veranda, or maru] where Nol-bu was sitting, but before he could get his shoes off to enter, Nol-bu jumped up and began yelling. I want you and your family out of this house, he shouted, shaking his pipe at Hung-bu. You and your brats have been a burden for long enough. Now get out! Be gone with you! With those words, he turned quickly and walked into his study.
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A shocked Hung-bu helped his wife and crying children gather up what few belongings they had. They left the house to the sound of the resounding bang of the gate as Nol-bu s grinning wife slammed it behind them. They wandered from one place to another until they stumbled upon a rundown old shack which was hardly large enough for all them to lie down. They made a game of trying to find things with which to mend the roof, and in no time it was repaired. Hung-bu did odd jobs at houses in nearby villages, and his wife and children gathered wild vegetables, mushrooms and berries for their meals. However, Hung-bu and his wife began to worry as the autumn nights got colder and it became more and more difficult to find food. Finally Hung-bu wife said, Please go to your brother house and get something, even if s s it is only barley. Hung-bu hated the thought of facing his brother, but he [was grieved by] facing his starving children even more, so the next morning he went to Nol-bu house. s Please, Brother, spare us a few bags of barley, he said, looking up at Nol-bu, who was standing on the porch.* We don have anything to eat. Please give me something. t I give you something, Nol-bu said haughtily, stepping down from the porch. Take ll this, you good-for-nothing bum! Take this! he yelled, hitting Hung-bu over and over with a stick. Get out, you bum! Get out! And don come begging around here again! t Leaving the house, Hung-bu passed by the kitchen.* At that very moment Nol-bu wife s was putting hot steamy rice into a bowl. Oh Sister-in-law, called Nol-bu, sticking his head inside the doorway, please give me a scoop of rice. In a flash, Nol-bu wife hit Hung-bu cheek with the rice scoop. Get out of here, you s s bum! Get out! she shrieked. Oh, thank you, Sister-in-law. Thank you for hitting me with the rice scoop. Hung-bu laughed as he pulled some rice from his cheek and stuck it in his mouth. Won you hit t this cheek, too, he said, laughing and turning his other cheek to her. Quickly wiping the scoop from her apron, she swung at Hung-bu other cheek but hit the s doorframe because he ducked. Hung-bu laughed as he ran through the [court]yard* and out the gate, pulling the remaining grains from his face and eating them. Somehow Hung-bu and his family made it through the long, cold winter. They were happy when spring finally arrived because they could gather roots and plants to eat. To their
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delight, a pair of swallows made a nest in the eaves of their roof. In a few weeks the nest was home to several baby swallows who chirped constantly for food. One day when Hung-bu returned home from working in a nearby field, he noticed a big snake near the corner of the house.* He killed it with a hoe. Then he realized that he didn t hear any chirping coming from under the eaves. He looked into the nest. It was empty. Then he looked on the ground. There was one of the tiny swallows. Hung-bu knew at once what had happened. The snake had eaten the other babies but in doing so had pushed this one out of the nest. Hung-bu picked up the baby swallow and examined it. One of its legs was broken. Hungbu gently bound the leg with string and put the bird back in its nest. The children lovingly cared for it, feeding it worms and insects, and soon it was flittering about the yard. In late autumn it flew southward with all the other birds. The next spring Hung-bu and his family were glad to see the birds return, for it meant the end of another long, hard winter. One warm day a lone swallow perched on their roof and chirped loudly. Then it flew in a circle around their yard* several times, dropped a seed at Hung-bu feet and flew away. Hung-bu and his family carefully planted the seed and s looked forward to eating gourds come autumn. The seed, a gift from the Queen Swallow to repay Hung-bu kindness, grew quickly into a s vine and soon there were three small gourds on it. Hung-bu and his wife were surprised at how fast and big the gourds grew. By autumn, when the gourds were ripe enough to eat, they were so big that Hung-bu and his children had to use a saw to cut them. Happily they cut the first gourd.* They couldn believe their eyes. Out tumbled strings of t gold and silver coins, all kinds of precious jewels, and silk and brocade fabrics. Once they were over the surprise, they cut the second gourd. At once the yard became filled with sacks of rice. They cut the last gourd. Out marched hundreds of tiny carpenters. Within a few minutes they constructed a large tile-roofed house surrounded by a wall with a large gate and then disappeared. Hung-bu and his family danced for joy. They were wealthy! Word of Hung-bu newfound wealth spread quickly throughout the nearby villages and s soon reached Nol-bu. It made him very cross, and finally he could not stand it any longer he had to go see for himself. Nol-bu stood in wonder in front of the impressive tile-roofed gate. * Shaking his head, he walked up to it and called loudly, Hung-bu! Hung-bu! Let me in! Hung-bu welcomed Nol-bu as if nothing had ever happened, and while they talked in Hung-bu study*, his wife served them persimmon tea. Finally Nol-bu could not restrain s himself, and he blurted out, How could a bum like you become wealthy overnight? Come on, tell me the truth. Who did you rob?
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Hung-bu told him about the swallow dropping the seed and how they planted it and were so surprised when they cut open the gourds. All I can imagine is that the swallow must have been the one whose leg I bandaged. What that? asked Nol-bu. You say you bandaged a swallow leg and it gave you the s s magic seed? Well, I not exactly sure, said Hung-bu, and then he explained about the swallow m falling out of the nest. Let me get this straight, said Nol-bu. A pair of swallows built a nest under the eaves of your roof. When the birds hatched, a snake crawled into the nest and ate all of the birds but one, which fell onto the ground and broke its leg. Then you bandaged the leg and when it healed, the bird flew away and the next spring brought you a magic gourd seed. It seems that way, smiled Hung-bu. I see, said Nol-bu, stroking his chin pensively. After a few momentssilence, he jumped up and said he had to leave. From that day on, Nol-bu thoughts were filled with images of swallows and magic gourd s seeds. Spring finally arrived, and he and his wife anxiously waited for a pair of swallows to build a nest under the eaves of their house. They even scattered a variety of grains in the yard and on the rooftop in hopes of attracting a pair. At long last a pair of swallows did build a nest under the eaves, and in a few weeks it was home to several baby birds. Every day Nol-bu watched for a snake to raid the nest* and every day he was disappointed. Then one day he decided he had waited long enough for a snake to come. He took one of the babies from the nest and broke one of its legs with his bare hands. Then he bound up the leg with some cord and, saying, Okay, you little bird, I fixed your broken leg so next spring bring me a magic gourd seed, placed it back in its nest. The bird recovered and flew southward in the autumn. Spring arrived and Nol-bu watched for the swallow to return. Finally a lone swallow came. It flew around the yard and then dropped a seed at Nol-bu feet and flew away. Nol-bu s was ecstatic. He shouted to his wife to come out and together they planted the seed. All summer they watched the seed grow into a vine and three of the biggest gourds they had ever seen ripen on it. Autumn arrived and it was finally time to open the gourds. Talking about how wealthy they were going to be, they sawed open the first gourd.* Out jumped hundreds of beggars. In a blink of an eye they were all over the house, eating every edible thing they could find. This can be! screamed Nol-bu. Something is wrong. There been a mistake. t s Surely there must be gold in the next gourd, cried his wife.
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Quickly they sawed open the next gourd. Out poured putrid night soil and covered them from head to foot. But they still did not give up. Slipping and sliding in the foul-smelling muck, they sawed open the last gourd. Out tumbled an army of ogres carrying large spiny mallets, and at once they began breaking down Nol-bu house. When nothing was left s standing, they hit Nol-bu and his wife until they passed out. Then they disappeared along with the beggars. Ironically, on that very day, Hung-bu and his wife decided to pay a visit to Nol-bu to try to [let] bygones be bygones. They were shocked to find the house in a shambles. They searched through the rubble and found Nol-bu and his wife. They gently propped them up and gave them some water. After a few moments they regained consciousness. Nol-bu looked into Hung-bu eyes and said, I was wrong, Hungs bu. I was wrong. Please forgive me. Don talk now, said Hung-bu. Just rest. You and your family can come live with us. t Everything will be fine. From that day on, Hung-bu and Nol-bu became the best of brothers, and their families lived happily together. From Korean Folk and Fairy Tales. Retold by Suzanne Crowder Han (Seoul and Elizabeth, N.J.: Hollym International, 1991). Reprinted by permission of the author.
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Covered jar Korean, late 19th century Choson period (13921910) White porcelain with cobalt underglaze decoration h. 3 in., dia. 2 in. Gift of Herbert Hall 92.15
Toward the end of the eighteenth century, Choson period white porcelain (paekcha) was used by a broad range of individuals and households. Once the reserve of Korea elites s and admired as far as Ming China and Japan, white porcelain began to be produced in great quantity and variety for popular consumption. Small objects such as brush stands and water droppers for the scholar desk were fashioned in unusual shapes, as were cups, s bowls, and food vessels for use in ancestral rites in commoner households. This covered food jar dates to a period when even more practical ceramics were being manufactured for everyday use. As with other white wares of this variety, the jar is simple and elegant and draws attention for its serviceable form. The finish has a bluish tint indicating a higher iron content than earlier porcelains and the lid is decorated with a folkish rendition of the Chinese character for fortune.
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Further Resources
Korea Resources at the SAM Teacher Resource Center (TRC) The following materials are available by loan from the SAM Teacher Resource Center (TRC), located at the Seattle Asian Art Museum in Volunteer Park. TRC hours are Thursdays, 25pm; Fridays, 25pm; and Saturdays, 15pm. The call numbers given are those used by the TRC. Complete listings are available from the TRC online database at s <http://www.seattleartmuseum.org/trc>. Available resources are listed by format: audiocassette, book, CD-ROM, curriculum guide, pamphlet, and video.
Audiocassettes
Tales of Korea, Cathy Spagnoli. New York: The Korea Society, 1994. Korean folktales, stories, proverbs, and riddles. Includes audiotape and teacher's guide. (ASIA 20.03.007)
Books
Asian Tales and Tellers, Cathy Spagnoli. Little Rock, Ark.: August House, 1998. Stories from various Asian countries on topics such as faith and belief, and harmony and friendship. Includes glossary and bibliography. (ASIA 10.030) Cooking the Korean Way, Okwha Chung and Judy Monroe. Minneapolis: Lerner Publications, 1988. Recipes for Korean dishes. (ASIA 20.03.027) The Immigrant Experience: The Korean Americans, Brian Lehrer; general editor, Sandra Stotsky. New York and Philadelphia: Chelsea House Publishers, 1996. Korea Cultures of the World series, Jill DuBois. New York: Michael Cavendish, 1996. With photographs. (ASIA 20.03.020) Korean Americans Cultures of America series, Lauren Lee. Tarrytown, N.Y.: Marshall Cavendish, 1995. Cultural history of Koreans in the United States, primarily since 1965. Includes chronology, glossary, and additional references. (ASIA 20.03.023) Korean Arts of the 18th Century: Splendor and Simplicity. New York: The Asia Society Galleries and Weatherhill, 1993. Exhibition catalog of Choson period court and religious art. (ASIA/Reg. Korea 20.03.006) Long Long Time Ago: Korean Folk Tales, Dong-Sung Kim. Seoul and Elizabeth, N.J.: Hollym International, 1998. The Magic Amber: A Korean Legend, Charles Reasoner. Troll Associates, 1994. (ASIA 20.03.025) Minhwa Korean Folk Art Prints. Seoul: Editions API, 1994. Each folio contains three sets of four 10-by-14-inch prints. Includes captions. (ASIA/Reg. Korea 20.03.008.010) Notes on Things Korean, Suzanne Crowder Han. Seoul: Hollym, 1995. Profusion of Color: Korean Costumes and Wrapping Cloths of the Choson Dynasty, Kumja Paik Kim and Huh Dong-wha. Seoul: Asian Art Museum of San Francisco and the Museum of Korean Embroidery, 1995. Exhibition catalog. Contains color photographs of period textiles and related articles. (ASIA/Reg. Korea 20.03.003)
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A Treasury of Asian Stories and Activities for Schools and Libraries, Cathy Spagnoli. Fort Atkinson: Alleyside Press, 1992. Tales and activities for young listeners from preschool- to third grade-levels. Includes story notes, bibliography, and selected internet sources,. (ASIA 10.029) The Rabbit Escape, Suzanne Crowder Han. New York: Holt, 1995. s The Rabbit Judgment, Suzanne Crowder Han. New York: Holt, 1994. s The Rabbit Tail, Suzanne Crowder Han. New York: Holt, 1999. s
CD-ROMs
Korean Folk Life. Seoul: National Folk Museum, 1995. General introduction to Korean folk culture. Topics include history, occupations, festivals, clothing, food, housing, popular beliefs and folklore. (ASIA Korea 20.03.030) Korean Spirit in Design. Seoul: Samsung, 1998. Styles and Esthetics in Traditional Korean Music, Byong Won Lee. Seoul: National Center for Korean Traditional Performing Arts, 1997. Text included (86 pp.). (ASIA 20.03.026) sun moon mountains rocks: An Introduction to Korean Art of the Choson Dynasty. Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1997. A user-friendly CD-ROM covering Korean art in three topics. Contains notes on history, maps, glossary, art lesson plans, and further resources. (ASIA/Reg. Korea 20.03 016 CD)
Curriculum Guides
Approaches to Teaching About Korea in a World Cultures Social Studies Curriculum. New York: East Asian Curriculum Project (EACP), Columbia University, 1989. Topics include: cultural transformer and transmitter, vortex of conflict, and division and reunification. With chronology and list of further resources. (ASIA/Reg. Korea 20.03.013) Asian Art for Young People: Curriculum Guide K12. San Francisco: Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, 1989. Activities based on the museum poster exhibit (posters not s included). (ASIA 10.005) Contemporary Korea and the Art of Yoong Bae. San Francisco: Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, 1997. (ASIA 20.03.019) Discover Korea: Family and Home. New York: The Asia Society, 1987. A middle school boy narrates a 25 minute introduction of Korean home and family life. Includes teacher's manual, an annotated script, and a poster of a Korean home. (ASIA/Reg. Korea 20.03.015 VIDEO) Evenings for Educators 199394: Splendor and Simplicity in Korean Art. Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1994. Teacher complement to the exhibition, s Korean Arts of the 18th Century: Splendor and Simplicity. Includes six slides with descriptions and two classroom activities. (ASIA/Reg. Korea 20.03.012) Hopes and Aspirations: A Teacher Workshop. San Francisco: Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, 1998. Teacher introduction to Korean decorative painting based on the s exhibition, Hopes and Aspirations. Catalog included.
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Korea: Art, History, and Social Studies. Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1995. Nine slides with general overview on Korea, activities, and discussion topics. (ASIA 20.03.011) Korea: Culture and Values A Teacher's Guide. New York: The Asia Society, 1993. Teacher's guide with twelve slides from the exhibition, Korean Arts of the 18th Century: Splendor and Simplicity. Includes information on Korean history, lesson plans, illustrations, and a map. (ASIA/Reg. Korea 20.03.004) Korea: A Teacher Guide. New York: The Asia Society, 1986. Readings on Korean s society and art. Includes map and an annotated bibliography. (ASIA 20.03.001)
Pamphlets
The Moon Through Clouds: Korea History and Korea Cultural and Artistic Heritage. s s Seoul: Overseas Information Service, 1991. Two illustrated pamphlets, with bibliographies. (ASIA 20.03.002) Recommended Resources on Korea Grades K12: An Introductory Listing, National Project on Asia in American Schools, Columbia University. Ann Arbor, Mich.: Association for Asian Studies, 1993. Listings include curriculum materials, fiction and nonfiction readings, and multicultural materials. (ASIA/Reg. Korea 20.03.005)
Videos
Korean Americans. Princeton, N.J.: Films for the Humanities and Sciences, 1994. Profiles a Korean American struggle to retain traditional values while adjusting to life in the United States. 50 mins. (ASIA 20.03.022) Korean Music: New Traditions, Choi Moon-Jin and Peter J. Park. Seattle, 1997. Performance of two contemporary compositions written for traditional Korean instruments: "Dance in Perfume of Aloes" and "Spring Snow." 30 mins. (ASIA 20.03.017) The Korean War. Princeton, N.J.: Films for the Humanities and Sciences, 1993. 30 mins. (ASIA 20.03.021) Mr. Oh: A Korean Calligrapher. San Francisco: Asian Art Museum of San Francisco. Profiles a Korean calligrapher now living in San Francisco. (ASIA 20.03.018) The Pacific Century, Pacific Basin Institute and KCTS/Seattle. South Burlington, Vt.: Annenberg/CPB Collection, 1992. Study of political and economic development in Pacific nations over the past 150 years, their relationships with each other and with the United States. 60 mins. (ASIA 20.01.056)
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Bibliography
Fine Arts- vol. I, Koreana: Korean Cultural Heritage Series. Seoul: Korea Foundation, 1994. Hungbu Nolbu: Two Brothers and Their Magic Gourds-vol. 2, Korean Folk Stories for Children Series. Seoul: Seoul International Tourist Publishing, 1981. Kim, Kumja Paik and Huh Dong-wha. Profusion of Color: Korean Costumes and Wrapping Cloths of the Choson Dynasty. Seoul: Asian Art Museum of San Francisco and the Museum of Korean Embroidery, 1995. Korean Folk and Fairy Tales. Retold by Suzanne Crowder Han. Seoul and Elizabeth, N.J.: Hollym International, 1991. Lee, O-Young. Korea in Its Creations. Translated by John Holstein. Seoul: Design House Publishers, 1994. Lett, Denise Potrzeba. In Pursuit of Status: The Making of South Korea New Urban s Middle Class. Cambridge: Harvard University Asia Center, 1998. Thought and Religion-vol.2, Koreana: Korean Cultural Heritage Series. Seoul: Korea Foundation, 1996. Traditional Lifestyles-vol. 4, Koreana: Korean Cultural Heritage Series. Seoul: Korea Foundation, 1998. Yang, Sunny. Hanbok: The Art of Korean Clothing. Seoul and Elizabeth, N.J.: Hollym International, 1997. Yoon Chin-young . The Grateful Swallow-vol. 2, Korea for Children: A Treasure of Legends, Myths and Heroes Series. Seoul: Daihak Publishing Company, 1982. Yoon Chin-young. Princess Pyonggang and Ondal the Fool-vol. 4, Korea for Children: A Treasure of Legends, Myths and Heroes Series. Seoul: Daihak Publishing Company, 1982.
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