Korean Folk Painting: Minhwa

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The strange  animal, clearly outlined in black ink and bright colours  against a blank background without any horizon line, sits in front of a pine tree. Its  jaws are open, revealing a set of fang-like teeth and a pink tongue.  Oddly,  the pupils of the eyes are yellow rather than white, and it also seems to be cross-eyed, as one eye is looking straight up, the other to the side, giving it   a decidedly  demented, even ‘stoned,’ expression.  After a moment, we realize that the creature is looking at the magpie perched on a branch  of the tree. Maybe they are having a conversation.  One wouldn’t say this creature is very frightening. In fact, the impression is rather endearing. From the evidence of the zig-zag striped coat, it looks   like a very stylized depiction of a tiger, but then we notice that the chest is covered in leopard spots. So while this creature is certainly inspired by the real tigers  that used to roam  old Korea,   it is actually a strange mythical beast. Why was it painted? And why it is coupled with a magpie?

This Magpie-Tiger painting is from 19th century Korea, and is an especially famous example of  a specific genre within Minhwa (literally, ‘people’s art’),  the  most accessible  kind of traditional Korean art, and therefore an excellent way to introduce Korean traditional culture to the wider world.   The anonymous painter who made this delightful painting  was not concerned  with  making  a  realistic imitation  of a tiger or magpie. His goal   was to create a visually striking image  based on a fixed repertoire of themes with specific meanings and practical purposes. 

Minhwa  is characteristically optimistic. It aims to convey a world without sorrow and pain. It is   to be distinguished from the art of the nobility of the Korean Joseon dynasty, although  it  was also an intrinsic part of the lives of the royal court, and as such, Minhwa should not be confused with ‘folk art,’ in the sense of a kind of painting exclusively of the uneducated lower classes.  Nevertheless,  high culture in Joseon was dominated by Chinese cultural norms, and  put a premium on intellectual and philosophical properties in art, and as result, while Minhwa was part of the lives of the upper classes, it was denigrated as  stylistically crude, and as excessively bound to primitive superstition.   But it is argued that Minhwa actually displays more intrinsically Korean characteristics, which ultimately derive from folkloric influences that blend animistic shamanism, Taoism, Buddhism and Confucianism. As such, no other country has  produced works comparable to Minhwa.

An example of Chaekgado - Book and object painting. A uniquely Korean style that blends elements of Western perspective with East Asian pictorial conventions

An example of Chaekgado - Book and object painting. A uniquely Korean style that blends elements of Western perspective with East Asian pictorial conventions

Both present-day Koreans and non-Koreans  are likely to find   Minhwa more than simply historically interesting.  In fact,  Minhwa   can seem strangely familiar, even to an Englishman like me.  This is because the dreams and hopes of the people of Joseon were not so very different from those of  the English today,  or from  anyone else.  They touch on the perennial desire for happiness and longevity.  The style in which these universal aspirations is visualized is also highly accessible to non-Koreans on a purely aesthetic level. The simple outlines, flat patterning, bold colours, stylization to the point of caricature,  and   subject-matter drawn from nature and everyday life, make Minhwa an art that connects  to a quasi-universal language of visual and stylistic preferences.  Consequently, while the specific cultural context with which Minhwa was produced has completely disappeared, and  although today people in the developed world  are no longer consciously  attached to an animistic worldview,  the pictorial values of Minhwa allows us to perceive  not only unsurmountable cultural differences but also a common share of cultural similarities. 

Images from a folding screen.

Images from a folding screen.

Minhwa has been categorized as ‘decorative art’, that is, as purely aesthetic in the narrow sense of being visually pleasing and functional.  But to describe Minhwa as ‘decorative art,’ is   misleading, because for those who owned such works  they were  not only beautiful but also useful because they were understood to be imbued with magical power.

Minhwa has also been  likened to the  expressionistic paintings of   modern artists like Picasso. Both comparisons are  misleading.  Minhwa cannot be described as ‘decorative’ in the Western sense because it is also symbolic, and functioned as part of the culture’s ritual processes.  But nor can it be described as  ‘expressionistic’ in the sense that modern Western painting is ‘expressionistic.’  Modern Western artists  were often directly inspired by ‘primitive’ art, although Korean Minhwa was largely unknown in the West in the early twentieth century, and certainly did not have the  impact  of Japanese prints and African tribal art. However, the qualities that attracted Western artist to non-Western art is clearly evident in Minhwa.  What Western artists were seeking in non-Western models was  alternative traditions to the one that dominated their culture, which derived from the Renaissance, and put a premium on the rational analysis of form, and the representational illusion of three dimension as on a two-dimensional surface using perspective.  Examples of non-Western art were appropriated as primarily  aesthetically atypical  phenomena with the capacity to subvert the norm, and their utility and symbolic function were ignored. For the avant-garde, ‘self-expression,’ ‘authenticity,’ ‘aesthetic autonomy,’ and ‘expressiveness’ were the most important artistic qualities, and   were linked to the capacity to innovate according to inner necessity. As a result,  emphasis was placed on the individualism of the style of the artist. Minhwa, by contrast is made by anonymous artists who followed specific pre-determined rules mandated by the requirements of their clientele, and they were committed to the expression of a clearly defined  consensual worldview.

The power of Minhwa  lies ultimately in the fact that it participates in a universal code – a common denominator for all living human beings, a core of desires and belief  that is tied to basic  human activities  like eating, defecating, procreating, sleeping, and aging. Furthermore, despite the ‘disenchantment’ that has come  with modernity, magical ways of thinking   persist, and they connect us to a power that cannot be fully accounted for according to strictly rational criteria. 

What  makes Minhwa  immediately accessible and appealing  to  both the modern Korean and  the non-Korean eye is not its  primarily role within a code that must be read like a text, and  depends on study.  Rather, we can respond directly to these painting’s extraordinary decorative and expressive force, which corresponds to experience as it occurs at the common human core more  directly than words. Minhwa  impacts  at a pre-verbal level  that is  also trans-cultural.  

Another example of Chaekgado on a folding screen.

Another example of Chaekgado on a folding screen.

Chaekgado on a folding screen.

Chaekgado on a folding screen.

Another popular theme: Flowers-and-Birds

Another popular theme: Flowers-and-Birds

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