Showing posts with label Hwangjinyi. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hwangjinyi. Show all posts

Thursday, August 11, 2011

Byeongamjeong: In The Footsteps of KBS's Hwang jinyi, Part 2

Do I really want to spend precious time hunting down Byeongamjeong, a pavilion cum bridge which may no longer resemble the one featured in the KBS drama, Hwang-jinyi? Though I may admire the work of  Ha Ji-won ( BTW, check her recent interview with CNNGO Seoul here)  and think the younger Jang Geun-seuk even cuter than his present all-too-pretty incarnation, I'm not sure that I'd be so crazy as to visit this place simply because it served as romantic backdrop to a fictitious romance.



So here's the contrast between reel life and real life. Above, the music video of the heart-breaking tragic tale of yangban youth ( played by Jang Geun-seuk - all wide-eyed and bushy-tailed before he developed the brooding hippie look ) and the lowborn heroine ( played by the radiant Ms Ha Ji-won ) with a charming proposal scene shot at the pavilion. Below, the more prosaic reality, minus the lovely lighting, floral embellishments and editing out of modern day touches like a dull phone pole.



How To Get There:  
By car -  Take the Jungang Expressway. Exit at Nadeulmok of Yecheon.
Head toward Yongmun on Local Road 928.  About 8km down this road, you should be able to see Byeongamjeong.  It's the easternmost pavilion in a group of pavilions at Seonghyeon-ri in Yongmun-myeon.

By bus - From Dong Seoul Terminal, board a bus bound for Yecheon ( Services run 7 times daily between 6.40 and 18. 40; it's a 2 hour and 20 minute trip). From Yecheon, I'd probably ask around for local buses headed towards Yongmun or take a taxi.



According to one source, parts of the pavilion and stone bridge have been demolished for safety reasons. The rest of the structure is supposed to have been earmarked for similar treatment but this puzzles me as Byeongamjeong has been designated Cultural Property Material No 453. Then again, after looking through the website of CHA (Cultural Heritage Administration of Korea), I'm beginning to wonder if that's a false assumption ie. that such designations don't guarantee immunity from bulldozers.



So these pics may be the remaining record of the existence of this pavilion. Which may be a bit of a shame. Even if it hadn't featured in the KBS drama, it's quite a charming spot and one can only imagine how much prettier it would be with lotus flowers in full bloom in late July and August.

The trees around the pond seem rather photogenic as well, with or without leaves.



Although I'm not so keen to go all the way to Yecheon to look for this pavilion, I realise there are some other attractions that make this place worth visiting. Will cover these in the next posting.

Meantime,  for more on this pavilion which enjoyed its five minutes of fame in Hwangjinyi, check out The Scent of Spring from the Silver Screen: Yecheon ( dated 2007-04-20 )

Sources:
http://findallvideo.com/please-look-at-me-geu-dae-bo-se-yo-choi-hye-jin-engroman-sub/id/1989206191
http://gyeongbukhere.blogspot.com/2011/05/yecheon.html
http://www.investkorea.org/InvestKoreaWar/work/ik/eng/bo/print_added.jsp?bno=704200006&sort_num=114
http://en.filmkorea.or.kr/search/search_viewer.asp?grp=101&dir=1826&gotopage=4
http://english.visitkorea.or.kr/enu/SI/SI_EN_3_1_1_1.jsp?cid=805822

Thursday, July 22, 2010

How Many Ways Can You Use A Hand Fan?

Doing this piece on Korean fans - no, not the kind who go after Kpop stars, but the hand-crafted ones as some Korean friends gave me a few beautiful ones recently. Plus,  summer seems the appropriate season to feature them.


Started drawing up a list of the ways in which Koreans have used fans and guess what? The number of  functions have now hit twenty! Let me count the ways, beginning with the traditional uses in terms of personal comfort as indicated in description of the “eight virtues” of the hand-held  fans :

1. Naturally they kept people cool in the summer heat. But how many people, in these days of battery-powered mini-fans, still use such eco-friendly devices?

2. The fan was also handy, not so much as a fly swatter, but to discourage insects from hovering around. Again, it was much greener than spraying insecticide.

3. Koreans working outdoors could also block off the sun rays by holding the fan to shade their eyes.

4. Instead of dirtying their hanbok when they had to sit on the ground to watch an outdoor performance, they sat on the open fan as a cushion.

5. It  protected the hair when the rustic folk had to bear large burdens of firewood etc on their heads.

The remaining three 'virtues' revolve around the domestic scene:

6. The fan acted as an  improvised cover for an open container
7. It was employed to fan hearth or kitchen fires
8. It could serve as a replacement for  a dustpan ?!

9. Sometimes, housewives used the fans to help them to sort out grains. ( though this wasn't included among the 8 virtues. )

However, fans served other important functions during the Joseon Dynasty.

10.  They were status symbols. Members of the royal family had the privilege of owning large fans which had 50 spokes. Fans flaunted by the yangban or aristocratic class were made of the finest quality paper and bamboo and decorated with precious metals or gemstones like amber or jade but they couldn't carry fans with more than 40 spokes. Ordinary folks had to be satisfied with poorer quality fans with much fewer spokes.

11.Fans were also significant to shamans ( mudang). The Shaman's Fan Painting (Songsubuchae) below has a fan within a fan. The female shaman on the right is holding a fan used for rituals as it has a "picture of the Sambul trinity who govern childbirth, life, and agriculture".  In one Korean dance, the performer who takes on the role of the mudang "captures the awakened souls with bu chae (fans) so they can rejoice with her and ease their suffering".



12. Pansori singers used the fan for dramatic effect while court performers entertained with the graceful fan dance or the buchaechum.



13. Artists would elevated the prestige of some fans when they showcased their skills in painting, calligraphy or composing poems. Such fans then were displayed as decorationns in the home.



14. Fans, of course, have long  been used as fashion accessories by ladies.


15. But they could also hide heir faces in genuine modesty or embarrassment or coyness. No doubt the kisaengs of the past practised the art of seduction by fluttering their lashes behind their fans.

16.  Fans were also bestowed as state gifts on foreign dignitaries.

17.  Ironically, some fans were used for far less diplomatic purposes - steel fans were once weapons  of stealth when the people were not allowed to bear swords in public. The art of making secret compartments which held razor blades or poisons must be a dying or dead art by now.



18 At the same time, a person skilled in martial arts could deflect knives and defend himself with a sturdy fan.

19. In these more commercial times, fans are curiosities recalling the past, reduced mostly to tourist souvenirs.

20. Finally, it has been adopted as a city symbol for Jeonju which still has a number of craftsmen who maintain this

sources:
http://alittlebirdietoldmeso.blogspot.com/2008_08_01_archive.htmlhttp://www.liveauctioneers.com/item/6668206
http://www.koreanartandantiques.com/items/803314/item803314store.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Korean.Dance-Buchaechum-01.jpg
http://www.worldartswest.org/main/edf_performer.asp?i=2
http://www.koreanpress.net/news/view.asp?idx=2171&msection=1&ssection=3
http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2923236

http://www.antiquealive.com/masters/Hand_Fans/Korean_Paper_Bamboo_Fan.html
 http://www.koreana.or.kr/months/news_view.asp?b_idx=703&lang=en&page_type=list
 http://weaponhouse.blogspot.com/2009/10/mu-puche-korean-fan.html
http://www.visitkorea.or.kr/ena/SH/whatToBuy/whatToBuy.jsp?action=item&cid=996013
http://english.ohmynews.com/articleview/article_view.asp?menu=c10400&no=220218&rel_no=1
http://www.mfms2010.org/sub0903.php

Saturday, October 10, 2009

Where Does Hwangjinyi Mourn Her First Love and Find Her Second?


Just a bit of  Trivial Pursuit for K drama fans:
After losing her first love, the kisaeng, Hwangjinyi, picks a pretty place in her attempt to drown her sorrows. Turns out to be the place where she also meets the man who eventually becomes her second love. Guess where?

Watch the KBS drama, or click here or go back to yesterday's posting for the answer.

source:
http://asiaenglish.visitkorea.or.kr/ena/CU/CU_EN_8_5_1_20.jsp
http://english.visitkorea.or.kr/enu/SI/SI_EN_3_1_1_1.jsp?cid=264533
http://english.visitkorea.or.kr/enu/CU/content/cms_view_294988.jsp