The Emergence of the Korean Art Collector and the Korean Art Market
Abstract
Articulating the shifting interests in Korean art and offering new ways of conceiving the biases that initiated and impacted its collecting, this book traces the rise of the modern Korean art market from its formative period in the 1870s through to its peak and subsequent decline in the 1930s. The discussion centres on the collecting of Koryŏ celadon ceramics as they formed the focal point of commercial exchanges of Korean artefacts and explores how their acquisition and ownership formed part of the complex power relationship that played out between the Koreans, Japanese, Americans, and Europeans. Drawing on a wide range of primary sources, the volume analyses collectors’ acquisition practices, arguing that their fascination with ceramics from the Koryŏ kingdom (918–1392) was shaped not only by the aesthetic appeal of the objects but also by biased perceptions of the Korean peninsula, its history, and people. The book will be of interest to scholars working in art history, social history, cultural history, Korean studies, collection studies, museum studies, Korean history, and Asian studies.
Keywords
Korea; Asia; art history; collecting; art market; ceramics; America; United States; Britain; England; United Kingdom; Goryeo; museum studies; collectors; celadon; nineteenth century; twentieth century; Hermit Kingdom; art buyers; colonial periodDOI
10.4324/9781003016564ISBN
9781040117606, 9781040117644, 9781003016564, 9780367860394, 9781040117606Publisher
Taylor & FrancisPublisher website
https://taylorandfrancis.com/Publication date and place
Oxford, 2025Imprint
RoutledgeClassification
History of art
Museology and heritage studies
Asian history
European history
History of the Americas
Politics and government
The arts: general topics
Regional / International studies