Traditional Oriental Painting Meets Modern Abstract Art
May 14, 2008 | Pleasantville, New York | Vetting explained
As a child I had a private tutor Miss Lee, Un Woo, a daughter of a prominent physician in Korea and an up and coming Oriental Art painter in Seoul. Not very proficient in Chinese characters, law, Confucius ethics and Oriental Art at the time I think the only thing I got out of those lessons back in Korea was the fundamentals of abstract art which I think is grounded on the same principle as Chinese characters which are essentially derived from simplified drawings and pictures. In this photo you can get a taste of how one American, Ms. Padilla, tied in the traditional disciplined art and ethics of Northeast Asian calligraphy with Western Modern Abstract Pop Art where composition and form are reduced to lines, curves and shades to embody the same ideals of ethics and discipline in art form. I had the fortune of viewing this gallery in the Pleasantville Public Library where my mother also took part. Photo of mother and daughter at the gallery attached. During the Kaen demonstration on 5/17/08 by Yoshiko Katsumi, she wrote a poem "Her hair flurried in the wind" for my keepsake.
- Tags:
iReport welcomes a lively discussion, so comments on iReports are not pre-screened before they post. See the iReport community guidelines for details about content that is not welcome on iReport.
What is iReport?
-
Share
Tell a story, offer an opinion, say what's important to you.
-
Discuss
Join the conversation on the day's big issues.
-
Be heard
The best iReports get vetted and used on CNN platforms.
The label “Not vetted by CNN” lets you know that this story hasn’t been both checked and cleared by a CNN editor.
iReport stories that have a red "CNN iReport" stamp in the corner have been vetted and
cleared. That means they've been selected and approved by a CNN producer to use on CNN,
on air, or on any of CNN's platforms.






Comments