Go Hui-dong
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Go Hui-dong | |
---|---|
Hangul: |
고희동
|
Hanja: |
高羲東
|
Revised Romanization: | Go Hui-dong |
McCune-Reischauer: | Ko Hǔi-dong |
Go Hui-dong, also known by the pen name Chun-gok (1886-1965), was the first Korean painter to adopt Western styles. He spent most of his life in Seoul. He studied French there from 1899 to 1903 and briefly took a post with the Korean government. Leaving the post in 1905, he studied Korean painting for several years and then traveled to Japan, where he studied Western-style painting under Kuroda Seiki from 1909 to 1915. He returned to Korea in 1915 and sought to fuse traditional and Korean styles.