Journey to Korea’s Ancient Silla Kingdom

Smithsonian National Museum of Asian Art
Smithsonian National Museum of Asian Art
8.5 هزار بار بازدید - 2 سال پیش - What can we learn by
What can we learn by visiting the sites of ancient civilizations? Is it possible to recreate the architecture of the past today? Reflect on these questions as you travel to Korea in this online program inspired by the current exhibition Once Upon a Roof: Vanished Korean Architecture. The journey takes you from the galleries of the National Museum of Asian Art to the ancient city of Gyeongju in southeastern Korea. Once the capital of the ancient Silla kingdom that lasted one thousand years (57 BCE–935 CE), the city is a well-known tourist destination rich with history and culture. Yoon Sangdeok, an expert in art and archaeology, leads this tour through temples and royal tombs that have endured to this day and through treasures discovered in and around the city in order to understand the surviving legacy of the ancient kingdom. Visit the royal garden built for crown princes of the Silla kingdom, where more than thirty-three thousand artifacts were unearthed in 1975, including the ornamented roof tiles featured in the exhibition Once Upon a Roof, currently on view at the museum. This tour will give you a chance to imagine the ancient city as it was more than one thousand years ago.

Yoon Sangdeok is senior curator and the head of the Exhibition Division at the National Museum of Korea. A specialist in Silla archaeology, Yoon conducted excavations of Silla remains and organized exhibitions on related subjects while he worked at the Gyeongju National Museum for five years beginning in 2007. He also served as a Korean co-organizer for the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s exhibition Silla: Korea’s Golden Kingdom in 2013.
 
Keith Wilson is curator of ancient Chinese art at the National Museum of Asian Art. Also interested in Korean art, Wilson organized Sacred Dedication: A Korean Buddhist Masterpiece in 2019 and the digital catalogue Goryeo Buddhist Paintings: A Closer Look, dedicated to the sixteen examples of such paintings in US museum collections.(https://publications.asia.si.edu/publ...)
 
Sunwoo Hwang joined the National Museum of Asian Art in 2018 as Korean program associate and is responsible for coordinating Korean programs, including exhibitions, public programs, and scholarly events.

Image: ⓒ 2019. Gyeongju Tourguide. All rights reserved
2 سال پیش در تاریخ 1401/07/13 منتشر شده است.
8,592 بـار بازدید شده
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