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Honor Thy Parents: Filial Piety in Chosǒn Literature and Paintings
Honor Thy Parents: Filial Piety in Chosǒn Literature and Paintings

Registration is now open to New York-area K-12 educators for Honor Thy Parents: Filial Piety in Chosǒn Literature and Paintings. Join Dr. Mark Peterson, Professor of Korean Studies at Brigham Young University, as he speaks about the representation of filial piety in the literature of the Chosǒn Dynasty. Dr. Kumja Paik Kim, Curator Emerita of Korean Art at the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, offers an in-depth analysis of the Confucian ideals reflected in Chosǒn paintings. Annette Wallach Cohen, School Psychologist, Art Therapist & Art Educator at P.S. 116, leads a hands-on arts workshop to help educators introduce classroom activities to their students.

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Korean Studies Conference
for
K-12 Teachers in the Greater New York Area

Thursday, June 7, 2012
9:00 AM-3:00 PM

 

 SCHEDULE

 9:00 AM - 11:00 AM






Filial Piety in Chosŏn Literature

Dr. Mark Peterson
Professor of Korean Studies
Brigham Young University


 
11:00 AM-11:15 AM


Break

 11:15-12:45 PM





Confucian Ideals Reflected in Chosǒn Paintings

Dr. Kumja Paik Kim
Curator Emerita of Korean Art
Asian Art Museum of San Francisco

 12:45-1:45 PM

Lunch
 1:45-3:00 PM





Teaching Neo Confucian Values Through Art

Annette Wallach Cohen
School Psychologist, Art Therapist & Art Educator
P.S. 116

Please contact Sojeong Kim at (212) 759-7525, ext. 326.

About the Presenters
Mark Peterson is head of the Korean Section, Department of Asian and Near Eastern Languages at Brigham Young University. Prior to his appointment at BYU in 1984, he was the director of the Fulbright program in Korea from 1978 to 1983. He is a member of the Association for Asian Studies, where he is the chair of the Korean Studies Committee, as well as the Royal Asiatic Society, the International Association for Korean Language Education, the International Korean Literature Association, and the American Association of Korean Teachers. He received a B.A. in Asian studies and anthropology from Brigham Young University in 1971 and a Ph.D. in East Asian languages and civilization from Harvard University in 1987.

Kumja Paik Kim received her doctorate in Asian Art History from Stanford University in 1982. While teaching at San Jose State University, she was appointed in 1989 to the position of the first Curator of Korean Art at the Asian Art Museum of San Francisco. On June 30, 2006 she retired from the AAMSF. During her tenure at the Asian Art Museum, she curated eight Korean art exhibitions. Besides her exhibition catalogues and her book, The Art of Korea: Highlights from the Collection of San Francisco’s Asian Art Museum, her articles have appeared in Artibus Asiae, Oriental Art, Orientations, Korean Culture, Korea Journal, etc. In 2007, she served as the special consultant for the new Korean Gallery at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and coordinated the MFAH’s publication of the Treasures from the National Museum of Korea. Currently she is on the Editorial Board of the Journal of Korean Art and Archaeology published by the National Museum of Korea, Seoul.

Annette Wallach Cohen completed her undergraduate degree in Fine Arts from the City University of New York, Hunter College. Her graduate degrees are in Art Therapy and Community School Psychology. During Annette’s 25 years as a School Psychologist in East Harlem, she inspired many of her students to create Asian paintings. She is presently employed at P.S. 116 in New York City. Annette is also a volunteer docent at The Rubin Museum of Art. Annette is an exhibiting photographer and her images can be viewed on her Web site Fotofantasmics.com.





















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