"E2024-G156"의 두 판 사이의 차이
(→Narrative) |
(→Story Map) |
||
| 11번째 줄: | 11번째 줄: | ||
==Story Map== | ==Story Map== | ||
| + | *[[S2024-G023| Global Gwangju: The Goryeoin Community and International Connections]] | ||
| + | ** [[E2024-G153|Gwangju’s Goryeoin Community: Social Cooperation and Support]] | ||
| + | ** [[E2024-G154|Gwangju’s Goryeoin Community: Youth Education]] | ||
| + | ** [[E2024-G155|Gwangju’s Goryeoin Community: Celebrating Culture]] | ||
| + | ** [[E2024-G156|Gwangju’s Representative Goryeoin Artist: Painter Viktor Moon]] | ||
| + | ** [[E2024-G187|Places to Visit in the Gwangju Goryeoin Village in Wolgok-dong]] | ||
[[분류:Story]] [[분류:이야기 조각]] [[분류:린지]] | [[분류:Story]] [[분류:이야기 조각]] [[분류:린지]] | ||
2025년 10월 11일 (토) 14:06 기준 최신판
Gwangju’s Representative Goryeoin Artist: Painter Viktor Moon
Narrative
Viktor Moon (1951-) is a Goryeoin artist from Kazakhstan known for his works depicting the forced migration of ethnic Koreans in 1937, which involved the relocation of 172,000 ethnic Koreans from the Russian Far East to Central Asia under Stalin’s orders. His significant works include “The Forced Migration Train of 1937”, “Our Father, Ussuriysk”, and “Portrait of Olga Ten”.
Moon moved to Gwangju’s Goryeoin Village in 2024 where he has been living since. In 2023, the Viktor Moon Art Museum was established in Gwangju’s Goryeoin Village to serve as a permanent exhibition for his works. Moon also designed the village’s logo. Before moving to Korea, Moon was the chief artist of the Korean Theater of Kazakhstan, the first national Korean theater outside the Korean Peninsula, for some 20 years.
Network Graph