Showing posts with label 미투리. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 미투리. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Lunch with Kim Yeongsuk and Bongsan Talchum

January 1st 2011
Nothing exciting to report research wise

January 2nd 2011
Another sort of day off research, aside from writing. I wrote yesterday, too.

January 3rd, 2011
I had lunch with 김영숙 Kim Yeongsuk, the office manager (and an 이수자 isuja) for 송파산대놀이 Songpa Sandae Noli. We really get along very well, and we had a long and pleasant talk over a really delicious lunch. The conversations were research related at times and personal at times, the research related stuff is better to leave out of the public account.

In the evening I had 봉산탈춤 Bongsan Talchum, but it was so frustrating, I packed a bag with my clothes, 미투리 slippers and 한삼 hansam sleeve extensions and then walked out of the house without it. I forgot the slippers last week, too. The problem is that we practice on a wood floor, without heating under it. The wood is so cold at this frozen time of the year that the cold travels up my legs until my knees are locked up with cold. Happily, however, 원중 Wonjung had an extra pair of sweatpants to lend me and 김은주 Kim Eunju let me use her hansam. We got a new student, who came escorted by her mom. Before long, mom decided to participate, too. Mom was noticeably better than the daughter, who is in middle school. In fact we had 16 people at rehearsal! Amazing! Everyone's getting jazzed for the performance, so they rehearsed really hard, first 사상좌 sasangjwa novice monk dance before Kim Eunju even got there, then we did all the monks and we did 사자춤 lion dance on our own as well. Since 영신 Yeongshin and 병호 Byeongho, both people who perform the lion dance with the troupe were there, it was a really good rehearsal. At the very end of class, Kim Eunju continued what she started last Thursday, teaching the motions of 소무 Somu. And we named our performance group: 탈 그리고 춤.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Meeting Professors

September 16th, 2010
Wow. It was the fullest day I think I’ve had so far.

In the morning I went to audit Prof. Hilary Finchum-Sung’s class “Intro to Korean Music.” She’s the first foreigner ever to be hired by a Korean music department. Not music department in Korea, a department that teaches KOREAN music. Wow! Actually I know other people like Heather Willoughby who are also ethnomusicologists with Korea as their region, and probably Heather or others could have been as competitive for that job if they’d been on the job market at the time that SNU was hiring. Regardless, last year she was teaching music theory IN KOREAN! She did say there was a lot of new vocabulary involved in teaching that class, but I was incredibly impressed. In fact, I’ve rarely been more impressed. Close up when we ate lunch after class she looked tired, but when she was teaching she was high energy, pretty and talented. The class is still in the highly introductory period where she’s setting a base-line of knowledge for the students to stand on so I knew most of what she taught, but she did it very well, demonstrating 거문고 Geomungo (6 string zither), 해금 Haegeum (two string fiddle) and 장구 janggu (hourglass drum). She is actually on her way to being really good on the Haegeum, and she sang a little with a very pleasing singing voice. She had some music students visit class to demonstrate 대금 Daegeum (transverse bamboo flute), 가야금 Gayageum (12 string zither) and 피리 piri (double-reed oboe), because it was the introduction to instruments class. So I had lunch with her and will go back to her class again.

Cell phone photo with Hilary and two of the music majors:


After that I rushed to meet Professor 전경욱 Jeon Gyeong'uk, who is one of the top experts on mask dance drama, and among professors who teach on the subject the one I respect the most, hands down. He is also officially the person I am affiliated with for the Fulbright. It was very hard to talk to him, as there were six people in his office when I arrived (it’s always like that!) and he prepared us all tea (full tea production with all the pouring of water and discarding this and that and making sure the temperature was just right and what not. He’s a big tea aficionado. I had a five minute window when no one else was there, he went to the bathroom then sent a fax (and I waited for him to finish doing it) then asked the first question on my list, and he moved to his computer and attached documents that he sent me, and while he was doing that a reporter from the 중앙일보 Joong-ang Ilbo arrived, and until I had to leave he was still lecturing her (and preparing more tea). The lecture to her was very interesting, I won’t type it up in the public blog version in detail, but the short version was he was going off about changes to the masks that actually meant they were not as well made as in the past, lost artistic ability, ornamentation, realism, details, etc. It was sort of a rant. I told him I’d read what he’d sent and meet him again in a couple weeks.
Cell phone photo: Prof. Jeon makes tea


I rushed home, had a two minute cold shower, grabbed my 한삼 hansam (white sleeve extensions for practicing 봉산탈춤 Bongsan Talchum) and my 미투리 shoes, loose pants and a t-shirt and rushed out to 봉산탈춤 where we had a fairly ordinary practice. I am worried about 원 중 Won Jung, who is applying to the National University of the Arts School of Traditional Performance. I don’t actually think he has much innate performance talent, and I wonder how much that counts (he wants to learn and devote himself to traditional arts, and through hard work he’ll get better… isn’t that what education is about?). His audition is Oct. 6th or 7th.

And I read academic Korean articles for tomorrow's class on all the bus and subway rides.