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조영석이 그린 이지당 조영복 초상 : 연거복본의 제작과 함의를 중심으로

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Authors

이경화

Issue Date
2021-09-30
Citation
한국문화, Vol.95 No., pp. 325-358
Keywords
조영석초상화송시열문인화가진재해Jo YeongseokportraitSong Siyeolliterati painterJin Jaehae
Abstract
In 1724, Jo Yeongseok (1686-1761), a representative literati painter of late Joseon
Korea, visited his older brother Jo Yeongbok (1672-1728), who had been exiled to
Yeongcheon, and painted a draft for his brothers portrait. The following year, Jo
Yeongbok was released from exile and he returned to his official position. Jo Yeongseok
commissioned Jin Jaehae, a leading portraitist during the early 18th century, to paint a
formal portrait of his brother wearing a sibok (pink-colored official robe). He himself
produced an informal portrait of Jo Yeongbok wearing a plain robe with a square hat
(banggeon) and showing his bare hands. This portrait by Jo Yeongseok is recognized as
jeonsin sajo, the ideal stage of expressing the spiritual essence of the sitter in a portrait.
During Joseon dynasty, portraiture was a specialized field of painting in which only
professional painters would engage. But despite being a scholar painter, Jo Yeongseok
created a portrait and even surpassed the artistic achievement of a professional painter.
As a Confucian intellectual, Jo shared the view of Neo-Confucians that painting was a
lowly skill (賤技). The given study explores what drove Jo Yeongseok to paint a
portrait and what he wanted to express through the depiction of his brother.
The hostilities and power struggles among political parties during the reign of King
Gyeongjong (r. 1720-1725) may have motivated Jo to paint his brothers portrait. The
Noron (old learning) faction, to which Jos family belonged, advocated for the kings
half-brother Yeoninggun (later Yeongjo, r. 1724-1776), but it was defeated by the Soron
(young learning), which aimed to protect the reign of Gyeongjong. As a result, the
Noron faced a major crisis and numerous of its scholar officials including Jo Yeongbok
were either banished or executed. The political situation suddenly changed when
Gyeongjong died unexpectedly in 1724. King Yeongjo succeeded the throne legitimately,
and Jo Yeongbok and other representatives of the Noron returned to their positions.
Once his brother was restored to power, Jo initiated the production of Jo Yeongboks
portraits based on the draft from his exile. The portrait painted by Jin Jaehae and
depicting Jo Yeongbok clad in an official robe symbolizes his loyalty to Yeongjo and
commemorates his political restoration. The other one portraying him with a plain robe
and a gray square hat reflects the sitters identity as a Confucian scholar. Furthermore, it
evokes the image of Song Siyeol (1607-1689), scholar and politician of the 17th century
and leader of the Noron faction, since there are several portraits of him wearing a white
hat and robe similar to Jo Yeongbok. Song Siyeols portraits were not only a symbol
of his studies and thoughts, but a cultural icon which was enshrined in portrait hall and
worshiped by Noron scholars. Songs portraits depicted by literati painters of a previous
generation, were in the center of Jo Yeongseoks ideas and experiences with portrait.
Following the precedent of Noron literati painters, Jo Yeongseok would have painted the
portrait to commemorate overcoming the political crisis and his brothers recovery. When
examining Jo Yeongseoks life and his artwork, it seems that literati painters in Joseon
are not only artists who pursue idealistic, aesthetic values, but that they were also
members of the high ruling class and they could not free themselves from their
socio-political responsibilities.
ISSN
1226-8356
Language
Korean
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/180158
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