Earthly Splendor: Korean Ceramics from the Collection
On view January 20 – September 9, 2018 at the Crow Museum of Asian Art
The Crow Museum’s Korean art collection consists of works ranging from stone sculptures to a small selection of paintings, furniture, chests, boxes, bronze mirrors, and other examples of decorative art. The majority, however, are ceramics. Of these ceramics, we are fortunate to have rich variety of stoneware from the early Three Kingdoms period (57 BCE-935 CE), celadon wares from the Goryeo dynasty (918-1392), and porcelains from the Joseon dynasty (1392-1897).
While Korea’s ceramic tradition dates back 7000 years, it was not until 1958 that ceramics became one of the first arts acknowledged as an independent discipline in Korean universities. Since then, Korean ceramic artists have developed an even broader range of techniques and forms in their work. They have travelled extensively and exhibited their works internationally, while simultaneously preserving and expanding upon some elements of Korea’s historical ceramic traditions.
This exhibition pairs outstanding examples of contemporary Korean ceramics with historical Korean ceramics from the museum’s permanent collection to highlight the material, aesthetic, stylistic, and technical developments of Korean ceramics throughout history. The breadth of the collection allows for direct comparison of these aesthetic transformations across time.
Earthly Splendor: Korean Ceramics from the Collection is organized by the Crow Museum of Asian Art and curated by Jacqueline Chao.
Header Image: Kwon, Soon Hyung (b. 1929), Nature, 2002. Porcelain clay body. Crow Museum of Asian Art. Courtesy of the Crow Museum of Asian Art.
Installation photography by Chad Redmon, Courtesy of the Crow Museum of Asian Art.