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Shin Saimdang

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Hangul
  
신사임당

Hangul
  
인선

Died
  
1551, Pyongan

Hanja
  
申師任堂

Hanja
  
仁善

Spouse
  
Yi Won-su (m. 1522–1551)

Name
  
Shin Saimdang

Children
  
Yi I

McCune–Reischauer
  
Sin Saimtang

Role
  
Artist


Shin Saimdang The Chosun Ilbo English Edition Daily News from Korea


Revised Romanization
  
Sin Saimdang

ArTravel _ Gangneung _ Ojukheon & Shin Saimdang


Sin Saimdang (申師任堂, October 29, 1504 – May 17, 1551) was a Korean artist, writer, calligraphist, and poet. She was the mother of the Korean Confucian scholar Yi I. Often held up as a model of Confucian ideals, her respectful nickname was Eojin Eomeoni (어진 어머니; "Wise Mother"). Her real name was Shin In Seon(신인선). Her pennames were Saim, Saimdang, Inimdang, and Imsajae.

Contents

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Shin saimdang


Life

Sin Saimdang FileShinSaimdangChochungdo02jpg Wikimedia Commons

Sin Saimdang was born and raised in Gangneung at the home of her maternal grandparents. Her father, Shin Myeonghwa (申命和) was a government official but did not actively join politics. Her mother was Lady Yi, the daughter of Yi Saon (李思溫). Shin had four younger sisters. Her maternal grandfather taught her as he would have taught a grandson. Being raised in that atmosphere, Sin Saimdang received an education that was not common for women of that era. Besides literature and poetry, she was adept at calligraphy, embroidery, and painting.

Sin Saimdang 276 best Korean Folk Art MINHWA images on Pinterest Folk art

Because she was raised in a household that had no sons, she spent much time at her parents' home. At the age of 19, she married Commander Yi Wonsu (李元秀) and with the consent of her husband she continued to spend time at the home of her parents. She accompanied her husband to his official posts in Seoul and in rural towns and gave birth to Yi I in Gangneung. However, Sin Saimdang died suddenly after moving to the Pyongan region at the age of 48.

Sin Saimdang HomestayKorea Whats on Korea News Saimdang Lights Diary

Saimdang was able to cultivate her talents despite the rigid Confucian society thanks to an unconventional household and an understanding husband. Having no brothers, she received an education that would have been bequeathed only to a son, and this background greatly influenced the way she educated her children.

Works

Sin Saimdang's artwork is known for its delicate beauty; insects, flowers, butterflies, orchids, grapes, fish, and landscapes were some of her favorite themes. Approximately 40 paintings of ink and stonepaint colors remain, although it is believed that many others exist.

Unfortunately not much of her calligraphy remains, but her style was greatly praised in her time, with high-ranking officials and connoisseurs writing records of her work. The scholar Eo Sukgwon of Myeongjong mentioned in his book Paegwan Japgi (hangul:패관잡기, hanja:稗官雜記, "The Storyteller's Miscellany") that Saimdang's paintings of grapes and landscapes compared to those of the notable artist Ahn Gyeon. In 1868, upon admiring the work of Saimdang, the governor of Gangneung remarked that "Saimdang's calligraphy is thoughtfully written, with nobility and elegance, serenity and purity, filled with the lady's virtue".

Poetry

  • Looking Back at my Parents' Home while Going Over Daegwallyeong Pass(hangul:유대관령망친정, hanja:踰大關嶺望親庭) - Poem written while leaving her parents' house, grief-stricken from leaving her mother alone
  • Thinking of Parents (hangul:사친,hanja:思親) - A poem about filial devotion to her mother
  • Paintings

  • Landscape (hangul:자리도, hanja:紫鯉圖)
  • Mountains and rivers (hangul:산수도, hanja:山水圖)
  • Grass and insect painting(hangul:초충도, hanja:草蟲圖)
  • Geese among reeds (hangul:노안도, hanja:蘆雁圖)
  • Legacy

    Sin Saimdang is the first woman to appear on a South Korean banknote, the 50,000 won note, first issued in June 2009. Feminist critics, however, have criticized this selection as reinforcing sexist stereotypes about women's roles.

    In modern culture

  • Portrayed by Lee Young-ae and Park Hye-soo in the 2017 SBS TV series Saimdang, Light's Diary.
  • References

    Sin Saimdang Wikipedia


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