In nineteenth and early twentieth century Korea, artisans carved joyful wooden figurines depicting acrobats, clowns and mystical animals (kkoktu) to place on the funeral biers of the departed. In their first exhibition in the US, a collection of 72 kkoktu reflect the realities of rural Korean village life during a period that left few written records and open a window on a timeless, characteristically Korean attitude towards death.

Added by Upcoming Robot on February 18, 2010

Comments

debs

Got tix to TheMoth (Love the moth) first - so may not make it - wil ltry my darndest

artcodes

Hey Deb! Thanks for the note. Have fun at TheMoth and hope to see you! :)