Education
1944, Graduated from Donggyeong Girl's Art Vocational School
1969-70, Studied at Goetz Academy in Paris
Career
Activity
1955-1981 National Exhibition Recommended, Invited Artist Hyundai Gallery Invitation 4th
1963 Solo exhibition at Sogong Gallery, Tokyo
1965 Solo exhibition in Tokyo "Ito" gallery
1967 Invitation Exhibition of Malaysian Government
1969 Exhibited at the 10th Sao Paulo Biennale
1970 South Pacific Folk Song Series Sketch Exhibition (Gallery of Newspaper Hall)
1973 Chung Kyungja Gallery (Hyundai Gallery)
1974 African Folklore Series sketch exhibition (Hyundai Gallery)
1977 Participated in the contemporary exhibition of Korean modern orientalism in Europe
1995 Cheon Kyung-ja's retrospective exhibition (Ho-am Gallery)
Awards career
Awards
1943-1944 Chuseok Award Winners
1955 Awarded the Presidential prize in the Korea MMA
1965 Won the Grand Prize
1971 Seoul Culture Award
1975 Samil Culture Prize-winning work "Flower flock"
1979 Awarded the Korean Art Prize
1983 Silver Medal
Chun Kyung-ja (1924-August 6, 2015) is the most well-known woman artist of Korean modern and contemporary art history. Although she was trained in traditional Asian painting and continued to use the same Oriental pigment on rice paper method throughout her life, she developed a unique, truly innovative painting style with vivid colors and strong expression, and most importantly powerful, individual themes. Her paintings have captivated the Korean people throughout her long career of seven decades and even after her death; she is called a kukmin hwaga, a people’s artist, by many.
Chun Kyung-ja has often been described by critics as an artist who explored solitude and sorrow—that is, deep human emotions. In her works, she explored the strong human connection with Spirit. She is also known by the nickname of “the magician of colors” for her bold and intense color use.
She often depicted female figures and flowers, but the subject matter that made her famous in her late twenties, during the Korean War, was snakes. In 1952, by exhibiting an extremely realistic painting of dozens of snakes tangled together, she became known to the public as an artist who is bold, unconventional, and, most importantly, deeply talented. Those snakes were painted solely based on her sketches of live snakes. About that period, she later said, “To survive the tragedies that happened in my personal life–the hunger and the war–I had to paint those abominable creatures. That was my scream to confirm my will to live.” read more
Later she was appointed as professor of Oriental Painting at Hong-Ik University in Seoul where she taught for decades, was honored with many awards, and elected to be a member of the Korean Academy of Art. Her paintings came to be extremely popular and costly, but her relationship with the gallery owners was not always smooth because she did not like selling her paintings unless she had to support her family or had other necessities. She often spent months to finish a painting, adding layers of color and texture. The layers on her works became thicker and more textured in the 70s and 80s. She also experimented with a variety of techniques, including scratching the surface of her paintings with sharp tools; through her intense work ethic and her consistent experimentation, she developed the most unique style in Korean Oriental painting.
In 1991, when she was at the height of her career, a national scandal involving a forgery of her work broke out, and she suffered a strong emotional blow. The forgery was in the possession of the Korean National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, under the Department of Culture. She insisted that the painting was not hers by citing all the differences in techniques and expression. The painting turned out to be a part of the confiscated assets of the former KCIA chief. Although the museum admitted that they had never had an appropriate authentication process, they started a severe smear campaign against her in collaboration with the commercial gallery owners. Never complicit by nature, she persistently claimed that the painting was a fake.
In 1998, she donated most of the paintings that she called “part of myself” to the Seoul City Museum of Art, and came to New York to live with one of her daughters. She passed away in 2015.
The Seoul City Museum of Art, in the heart of Seoul, contains her permanent exhibition, where art lovers and citizens can visit her artwork anytime.