Chang Ucchin
Chang Ucchin, Magpie, 1958, Oil on canvas, 40×31cm. MMCA collection

Chang Ucchin

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Chang Ucchin (1917-1990) was a second son in Songyong-li, Yeongi-gun, Chungcheongnam-do. He graduated from the Department of Western Painting at Teikoku Art School in Tokyo from 1939 to 1944. After independence, he submitted his work to the New Realism Group Exhibition. He then taught as a professor at Seoul National University from 1954 to 1960 before retiring to focus on his art. Being away from the crowded city life of Seoul, he preferred to live alone in order to freely practice art in his studio. He had art studios in Deokso, Sooanbo, and Singal, and his transition through these sites is reflected in the changes in his style. His works dealing with traditional thatched houses, trees, figures in traditional clothing, and animals such as magpies, and dogs, show the humble and liberated life lost during the modernization of Korea. His thinly smeared and lightly colourful approach oil painting made great use of empty and marginal space, resulting in a unique manner heavily influenced by Buddhist and Taoist philosophies.
* Source: Multilingual Glossary of Korean Art. Korea Arts Management Service

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