Korean painting reveals a connectivity with nature that parallels the Korean traditional world view. Living in a dramatic landscape of rugged peaks, deep valleys and broad rivers, Koreans have long held nature in deep reverence. This respect, this yearning for nature is immediately apparent in Korean paintings, whose aesthetic is likened to an "artless art" of gently lines, generous shapes and naturalistic colors. Beauty is found in the big picture rather than the details; paintings exhibit a naturalness that moves the viewer with its humility.
Many Korean paintings were painted not by artists, but by ordinary nobles and even commoners. For the people of old Korea, painting was often a part of life, a way to express their inner spirit. Perhaps it is this that makes Korean painting so approachable, so human.
Introduction
Chapter 1 Korea's Painting Tradition
Chapter 2 Paintings in History
Chapter 3 Buddhist Painting
Chapter 4 A Scholar's Art
Chapter 5 Records of Nature
Chapter 6 Scenes of Everyday Life
Chapter 7 Faces from the Past, Portrait Paintings
Chapter 8 Folklore Painting
Appendix