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조선 중기 회화관 연구: 浙派 山水畵와 詩畵合一의 관계를 중심으로 : The Paintings in Mid-Chosun and Its Relation to Contemporary Poetry on Records

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Authors

정혜린

Issue Date
2009
Publisher
서울대학교 인문학연구원
Citation
인문논총, Vol.62, pp. 169-202
Keywords
浙派詩畵合一盛唐風朝鮮中期宮庭畵家吳派題畵詩明代Zhe schoolmid-Chosunhigh Tang style poetrycourt paintersWu schoolMing dynastyunity of painting and poetry
Abstract
The research on paintings in mid-Chosun has crucial troubles in that the
painting works remain rare and the writings on them also are mainly
poetry just appreciating the landscapes not often mentioning the stuff on
canvas even less analytical. However the naive writings point the criteria
of appreciation and their ultimate values in those days through their lyric
forms.
This paper reveals the landscape style in mid-Chosun was influenced by
high Tang style poetry especially of serene and lyric prevalent in those days
in Chosun from its start. Poetry of those days encouraged painters to show
the similarities between paintings and poetry ; composition of clear and fine
near scene with person and vague or blurry distant scene, and its fresh
unsecular mood. Even the poets out of the style above, intense or narrative,
always depicted the paintings as of serene and lyric. With these characteristics
of records on the paintings, it is doubtful on what point or how
much the landscape style in mid-Chosun is that of Zhe school in Ming
dynasty almost unquestioned until now.
Zhe school paintings dealt the secular literati enjoying lifes in cities as well as the those in the depths of a mountain, whose faces were also secular
in many case. It seems clear that the extents of landscape subject of mid
Chosun and Zhe school are different and the former imported just a part of
the latter.
Parallel to the situation on subject of the paintings it is hardly to say
that the form of the paintings is that of Zhe school. There only remain
records written in mid Chosun on several names of court painters of Ming
dynasty nor of Zhe neither of Wu school. That means the appreciators of
Chosun were not enough to discriminate the three styles in Ming dynasty
or Zhe school were passed to Chosun its rough and secular vigor diminished
blending with court painting style. It is not odd why Kim, Myung-Kuk, a
court painter in mid-Chosun, renowned as influenced from wild and heterodox
school and as famous today, was never praised at least in the records
written in mid Chosun.
This investigation on records tells that the paintings in mid-Chosun were
far literary and unworldly than those of Zhe school.
ISSN
1598-3021
Language
Korean
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/70909
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