Ik-Joong Kang, Moon Jar, 2008 © Gallery Hyundai

Gallery Hyundai Gangnam opens the new year of 2009 with 《Artists and Moon Jar》, an exhibition centered on the moon jar, a subject that represents the beauty of Korean aesthetics. Planned in the spirit of welcoming the new year, the exhibition seeks to wish for abundance and good fortune, to honor pride in Korean culture and its noble spirit, and to renew awareness of Korea’s distinctive traditional beauty as reflected in art.

Two leading figures, Sang-bong Do and Whanki Kim, praised the moon jar, saying that “everything in my art came from Joseon white porcelain jars,” and each collected dozens of moon jars, making them a recurring subject in their paintings. The internationally renowned American contemporary artist Ellsworth Kelly also once remarked that he was “captivated by the lines of the Joseon white porcelain moon jar—an outcome of emptying everything—and drew inspiration from it.”

The moon jar is named for the way its clean white surface and rounded form evoke the full moon; it is also known as Baekja Daeho (White Porcelain Large Jar). With its generous form and gentle lines, the moon jar is often regarded as the most characteristically Korean expression of beauty and can be seen as a flowering of Joseon culture.

Moon jars are made by forming the upper and lower halves separately and then joining them together. With their soft white tone, flowing curves, and ample, unadorned form, they are considered among the highest-valued cultural heritages in terms of sculptural excellence across the Joseon period.


Kim Whanki’s work © Gallery Hyundai

This exhibition presents several outstanding works by Sang-bong Do and Whanki Kim—both deeply enamored with the elegance of the moon jar—alongside two-dimensional and sculptural works by established contemporary artists who have used the moon jar as a subject, including Younghoon Ko, Bonchang Koo, Ik-Joong Kang, Dukyong Kim, and Kwangho Chung.

In ceramics, the exhibition includes works by the late Ikhwan Han, as well as by Boo-won Park, who is celebrating his 70th birthday; Youngsook Park, whose works are held in the collections of the British Museum and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; and also by Daesup Kwon, Cheol Shin, Minsu Kang, Eunkyung Kim, Yanggu, and Shinbong Kang.

In addition, with the support of private collectors, an 18th-century Joseon white porcelain moon jar will be presented on special loan and exhibited together with the contemporary works.

By bringing together ceramic works that carry forward the lineage of Joseon moon jars, and paintings and sculptures that draw on the moon jar as artistic inspiration—captivated by its formal beauty and line—this exhibition offers a valuable opportunity to once again experience the aesthetics and spirit embodied in the moon jar.

《Artists and Moon Jar》 opens on January 15, 2009, and will run through February 10, spanning the Korean traditional holidays of Lunar New Year and the first full moon of the lunar year. Lectures on the moon jar by former Administrator of the Cultural Heritage Administration, Hong-jun Yoo, will be held in the exhibition space at 2:00 PM on Thursday, January 15 and Sunday, February 1.

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