[Meeting Korean Culture Abroad]
Korean Art in the US—The Smithsonian’s National Museum of Asian Art
A Korean ceramic bowl at the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Asian
Art
Located in Washington, DC, the Smithsonian’s National Museum of Asian
Art is committed to preserving, exhibiting, and interpreting exemplary
works of Asian art. It was established when Charles Lang Freer, an
American industrialist known as the “King of the Railroad,” donated a
huge collection of Asian artworks to the US government.
An underground exhibition space connects the museum’s Freer Gallery of
Art to the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery, which has a collection of over
10,000 Asian artworks.
The Freer Gallery of Art currently possesses 540 important Korean art
s. Most of the items are ceramic works, but there also are
prehistoric artifacts and a couple of Buddhist paintings. Most of the
Korean collection was purchased by Charles Lang Freer in the early
1890s, and the collection has grown either through donations or
purchases over the past decades.
Among the Arthur M. Sackler Gallery’s Korean collection are a few
prehistoric artifacts, one Buddhist painting from the Goryeo Dynasty,
and artworks by contemporary artists Do Ho Suh and Lee Ufan.
Almost all the items in the National Museum of Asian Art’s Korean
collections can be viewed online:
http://korean-ceramics.asia.si.edu