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![]() Discovering Hanok's Hidden Beauty By Kim Ki-tae Staff Reporter Yangjindang Mansion in Andong, North Kyongsang Province /Courtesy of Ddanworld Entering the main gate of hanok, Korea's traditional house, you may encounter a male servant in white olden-day attire diligently sweeping the front yard. The house's daughter-in-law in a chignon scurries to the kitchen, as her maid wearing her hair in braids follows closely behind. In the open living room stands the house's noble patriarch with a long pipe in hand. As he looks over his vast territory beyond the wall, two of his grandsons sit in the kneeling position, one reads aloud from a Chinese classic, while the younger one dozes off. For Park Seon-ju, curator of National Folk Museum of Korea, visiting a hanok is like traveling back in a time machine to the past, to a scene typical of the Choson Kingdom's days. Her new book ``Strolling Around Hanok (Hanul Arae Kiwajibul Konilda)'' is a record of her time travels to 22 time-honored mansions scattered around the nation. ``It is thrilling to visit old houses and find vestiges of the ancient resident's lifestyles,'' Park told The Korea Times in an interview on Tuesday at the museum building. ``Understanding the structure of each hanok helps better understand their daily lives, and vice versa,'' Park said. For example, while visiting Karam Chongtaek mansion in Yongdok, North Kyongsang Province, she said the residence's design materializes the owners' virtue of conciliation and harmonization. Referring to Yun Chung's mansion in Nonsan, South Chungchong Province, she said the elegant design shows up the integrity of the former owner Yun, a well known Confucian scholar (1629-1714). Park Seon-ju Park also said Korea's noble residences are mostly designed not to overwhelm, but rather to comfort visitors through a peculiar juxtaposition. ``In architectural terms, you won't feel any disruption while moving from the gate to the front yard, and around the rooms of a hanok. Thus, you can psychologically feel integrated in the structure,'' she said. According to Park, the style is the major difference between traditional Korean and Western mansions. ``Western ones are apparently grandiose and brilliant, but I do not feel at home within them,'' she said. ``I feel that Western mansions are viewed more as objects, while the Korean structures are more homelike.'' To better appreciate the aesthetic aspect of the hanok, Park suggests visitors should see how the residences connect with their surroundings. ``If you lift the whole compound up and move it to another area, it would become a completely different building. A hanok should be viewed in the context of its surroundings,'' she said. Park uses the example of Kwangajong, meaning ``observing farming.'' The mansion, located in Yangdong, North Kyongsang Province, is designed for its owner to be able to overlook its adjacent rice paddy, where farmers work on the field. ``The whole compound is built to directly face and harmonize the paddy. In another place, the name would be different,'' she said. She also advised visitors to imagine how males and females move in the house in the web of routes among gates, rooms, kitchen and stores. ``Meticulous observers may find every house sets its separate courses for males and females to move along, and it is quite interesting how and where the routes for the two sexes intersect in each house,'' she said. Attracted to the beauty of the hanok, she drives out of Seoul almost every weekend. Last year she visited Andong, a city in North Kyungsang province, nine times. She says it's always nice to stumble upon unfounded ``jewels'' on her field trips. ``In every village, there are usually one or two handsome, well preserved houses,'' she said. The field trip is a decades-long hobby for the graduate of the Architectural Engineering Department at Yonsei University. She was even taken in by the police during a trip to Kyodong Island off Kanghwa Island west of Inchon in the early 1990s. The islanders reported her to the police, suspecting the stranger with a camera and measuring equipment was a spy. For the avid hanok lover, it is regrettable to see more and more traditional houses left unpreserved or inhabited. Of the 22 mansions in the book, nine are empty or used as homestay accommodation. Of the 13 other mansions, mainly only older people reside in them, with most of their offspring living in urban areas. Park points that the old heritage needs more financial support. ``A house is no longer a house if there are no residents,'' she notes. Park's Tips on Appreciating Hanok 1. Look at the scenery around the residence from the inside rather than from the outside. 2. When seeing the mansion from the outside, observe its structural relationships with its surroundings, like roads, mountains, streams and fields. 3. See how the architecture uses the sunlight for illumination by observing the arrangement of windows 4. Imagine how its male and female residents would have moved within the compound along the nexus of routes. There are always separate routes for the different sexes and, more interestingly, junctures. 02-01-2006 17:33 |
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