• Title/Summary/Keyword: Whanki Kim

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A Study on the Color Symbols of 'Blue' Embracing the Universe in Kim Whanki's Art Works (김환기 작품 속 우주를 품은 '청색'의 색채 상징성)

  • Park Boram
    • The Journal of the Convergence on Culture Technology
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    • v.9 no.5
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    • pp.291-298
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    • 2023
  • The purpose of this study is to appreciate abstract art works in a deeper and richer way by analyzing and examining the blue symbols used in Hwanki's work "Universe". Research problems to realize the research purpose are as follows. First, what meaning and symbol does Whanki's work "Universe" contain, and second, what meaning and symbol does "blue" that embraces the universe contain. The method of this study is picture analysis through literature research. As a result of this study, Whanki's work "Universe" contains a cosmos that shows constant movement, circulation, and repetition as an introverted and performance expression of the universe, and the main symbol of "Blue" is a blue microcosm that repeatedly circulates heaven and the underworld.

Art of Dislocation, Exile, and Diaspora: Korean Artists in New York in the 1960s and 1970s (1960-70년대 뉴욕의 한국작가: 이주, 망명, 디아스포라의 미술)

  • Yang, Eunhee
    • The Journal of Art Theory & Practice
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    • no.16
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    • pp.107-137
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    • 2013
  • This paper examines a number of Korean artists-Whanki Kim, Po Kim, Byungki Kim, Lim Choong-Sup, Min Byung-Ok and etc-working in New York in the 1960s and 1970s, focusing on their motivations to head for the U.S. and their life and activity in the newly-emerged city of international art. The thesis was conceived based upon the fact that New York has been one of the major venues for Korean artists in which to live, study, travel and stay after the Korean War. Moreover, the United States, since 1945, has had a tremendous influence upon Korea politically, socially, economically, and, above all, culturally. This study is divided into three major sections. The first one attends to the reasons that these artists moved out of Korea while including in this discussion, the long-standing yearning of the Korean intelligentsia to experience more modernized cultures, and American postwar cultural policies that stimulated them to envision life beyond their national parameters, in a country heavily entrenched in Cold War ideology. The second part examines these artists' pursuit of abstraction in New York where it was already losing its avant-garde status as opposed to the style's cutting edge cache in Korea. While their turn to abstraction was outdated from New York's critical perspective, it was seen to be de rigueur for Koreans that had developed through phases from Art Informel in the 1960s to Dansaekhwa (monochromatic paintings) in the 1970s. The third part focuses on the artists' struggle while caught between a dualistic framework such as Korea/U.S, East/West, center/margin, traditional/modern, and abstraction/figuration. Despite such dichotomic frames, they identified abstract art as the epitome of pure, absolute art, which revealed their beliefs inherited from western modernism during the colonial period before 1910-1945. In fact, their reality as immigrants in America put them in a diasporic space where they oscillated between the fixed, essentialist Korean identity and the floating, transforming identity as international artists in New York or Korean-American artists. Thus their abstract and semi-abstract art reflect the in-between identity from the diasporic space while demonstrating their yearning for a land of political freedom, intellectual fulfillment and the continuity of modern art's legacy imposed upon them over the course of Korea's tumultuous history in the twentieth century and making the artists as precursor of transnational, transcultural art of the global age in the twenty-first century.

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Liquid Crystal Alignment Stability of Polyvinylcinnamate Photonslignment Layer (Polyvinylcinnamate 광배향막의 액정 배향 안정성)

  • Lim Ji-Chul;Choi Sie-Hyung;Kim Whanki;Kim Sung Soo;Song Kigook
    • Polymer(Korea)
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    • v.29 no.4
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    • pp.413-417
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    • 2005
  • Orientations of liquid crystal molecules on a surface of a film of photoreactive polyvinylcinnamate were investigated in order to apply as an alignment layer of LCD. When the polyvinylcinnamate film was exposed to linearly polarized W light, optical anisotropy was induced in the film through a selective photoreaction. Liquid crystal molecules on a surface of the film was aligned along the oriented polymer chain direction through intermolecular interactions. Thermal and light stability of the photoaligned LC cell were studied by investigating LC alignment changes after the alignment layer was treated with heat and W light. When the film was exposed with linearly polarized UV several times, the LC alignment was induced only along the final UV exposure direction.