Koryŏ period (918–1392)
- Related Topics:
- Korea
- East Asian arts
- Chosŏn style
- magatama
In 935 the Unified Silla monarchy was supplanted by the newly risen Koryŏ dynasty (918–1392). Buddhism once again prospered under royal patronage. Koryŏ’s close cultural ties with China during the Song period (960–1279) resulted in direct influences from the advanced Chinese urban culture, and highly refined lifestyles prevailed among the aristocrats, the more important court officials, and the high-ranking Buddhist priests. The peace of the realm, however, was often disrupted by invaders from Manchuria, first Khitan, then Juchen (Jin), and finally Mongols (Yuan dynasty). In 1232 the Koryŏ court fled to Kanghwa Island at the mouth of the Han River, a short distance west of Seoul, leaving the country to Mongol devastation and control. The art of Koryŏ never again equaled its pre-Mongol achievements.
Few original examples of Koryŏ architecture have survived. Koryŏ stone sculpture and stone pagoda construction took different forms from that of the Unified Silla period. For example, multisided, multistory pagodas and funerary pagodas for noted high priests were constructed in quantity. Good bronze temple bells were cast, although they were smaller in size than those produced in the Unified Silla kingdom. Monks painstakingly copied Buddhist sutras in gold and silver ink on thick dark blue paper. Printing and wood-block engraving were innovations that reached a high state of development. A Koryŏ book is comparable in printing technique to the finest Chinese editions of the Song period. The famous wood-block edition of the entire Tripitaka, a long Buddhist canonical text, was created on Kanghwa Island in the mid-13th century as a commission of the government in exile. More than 80,000 engraved woodblocks—today stored at Haein Temple—were used to print this edition. Another major artistic achievement of the Koryŏ period was the production of porcelain with a celadon glaze. Sets of celadon ware were customarily buried with the dead, and it is from these tombs that most of the Koryŏ celadon on exhibit in the 21st century came.
Painting
Only about 10 examples of original Koryŏ painting are extant, and most of these are in Japan. They are mainly minor works on Buddhist themes except for several badly worn fragments of a hunting scene attributed to King Kongmin (1351–74) and two landscapes by other artists. There is little to be said about these isolated works except that they are in varying degrees in the style of Chinese painting of the Song period (960–1279). Among the few examples of Koryŏ temple wall paintings are the Buddhistic images in the Chosa-dang (Founder’s Hall) at Pusŏk Temple (1377) and the paintings of flowers in the main hall of the Sudŏk Temple (1308). Among the important examples of Koryŏ tomb painting is an image of a flying deva (from the 12th or 13th century; one of a group of heavenly beings who are the guardians of Buddhism) discovered in 1971 on the wall of a tomb at Kŏch’ang in southeastern South Korea.
Sculpture
Compared with that of the Unified Silla period, Koryŏ sculpture shows a decline in both quantity and quality. However, before the decline a momentary surge of naturalism, a traditionally northern Korean quality, revitalized the period. Large images with imposing bodies were successfully cast in iron, a medium not used since the late Unified Silla period. These cast-iron images were plastered and painted. Direct copies from 8th-century Unified Silla models were often attempted. The colossal seated iron Buddha in Seoul’s National Museum of Korea is the best example of this revival style. This image of the Buddha was clearly influenced by the large Shakyamuni of the Unified Silla cave temple of Sŏkkuram. Only the long narrow eyes, the sharpened nose, and a certain angularity in the treatment of the drapery give the Buddha a unique Koryŏ coldness that heralds the rather abstract quality found in later iron images.
In stone sculpture, also, the revival style is noticeable. The trend, however, was short-lived, and by the 12th century Koryŏ sculptors seem to have lost the art of working large, fully rounded figures in stone or metal. The decline in technique was manifested in the abstract tendency of certain figures of the middle of the Koryŏ period, such as the seated iron Buddha in Ch’ungju.
Although the sculpture produced by the major workshops suffered a decline, good sculptors could still be found in the countryside. One of the best known is the master who carved a set of wooden play masks for the village of Hahoe near Andong in southeastern South Korea. These masks are marked by an exotic realism. The deep-set eyes are arranged asymmetrically so as to become mobile under the play of changing light and shade. The nose, very un-Korean, is extraordinarily long and aquiline. The separately made chin, like the nose, is massive. Models for these exotic masks must have come from China, as early as the Tang dynasty, when elements of Persian and Central Asian art found their way into China. These Korean masks might well have served as the intermediary links through which the Japanese mask for the Noh drama developed from original Chinese models.