Thứ Hai, 29 tháng 7, 2013

From slum town to art village



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30505 130626115633 busan gamcheon culture village 15 horizontal gallery Drought Shrinks Slightly, NOAA Issues Gloomy OutlookKorean artists and art students have installed various works of art throughout Gamcheon village. Can you spot the painted sculptures in this photo?


30505 130626113230 busan gamcheon culture village 3 horizontal gallery Drought Shrinks Slightly, NOAA Issues Gloomy Outlook“People and Birds,” by artist Jun Young-jin (look on the roof) is one of many art installations placed in houses throughout the village.


30505 130626113454 busan gamcheon culture village 5 horizontal gallery Drought Shrinks Slightly, NOAA Issues Gloomy OutlookThe public art project called on villagers’ participation, as well as input from artists. The “Culture Garden” series of painted wooden fish is a joint project by artists Jin Young-sub and Park Kyung-seok and Gamcheon locals.


30505 130626113020 busan gamcheon culture village 2 horizontal gallery Drought Shrinks Slightly, NOAA Issues Gloomy OutlookThe village “closes” to tourists at 6 p.m. so that residents can maintain their privacy in the evenings.


30505 130626113935 busan gamcheon culture village 8 horizontal gallery Drought Shrinks Slightly, NOAA Issues Gloomy OutlookIn order to not get lost, visitors are instructed to follow schools of painted wooden fish throughout the village.


ffe24 130626113706 busan gamcheon culture village 6 horizontal gallery Drought Shrinks Slightly, NOAA Issues Gloomy OutlookAbandoned houses have been turned into exhibition spaces for works such as “Room of Darkness” (in top right of this picture).


ffe24 130626114352 busan gamcheon culture village 9 horizontal gallery Drought Shrinks Slightly, NOAA Issues Gloomy OutlookView from the roof of the “Sky Garden” village information center.


ffe24 130626114750 busan gamcheon culture village 11 horizontal gallery Drought Shrinks Slightly, NOAA Issues Gloomy OutlookHouses have been converted into restaurants and cafes. Some are run by the village, others by individuals.


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The village is dotted with playful photo ops such as this colorful “lighthouse.”


ffe24 130626115249 busan gamcheon culture village 13 horizontal gallery Drought Shrinks Slightly, NOAA Issues Gloomy OutlookThe “Little Prince” is one of many quirky surprises found around corners in Gamcheon.


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The old bathhouse has been turned into the village community center where visitors can buy coffee and learn how to make pottery. The structure of the bathhouse remains — one artist has recreated a bored bathhouse receptionist.


ffe24 130626115945 busan gamcheon culture village 17 horizontal gallery Drought Shrinks Slightly, NOAA Issues Gloomy OutlookThe new exhibition space at the old bathhouse shows how things used to be.


71acd 130626112314 busan gamcheon culture village 1 horizontal gallery Drought Shrinks Slightly, NOAA Issues Gloomy OutlookGamcheon was founded in 1955 by the followers of Taegeukdo, a religious community formed in the early 1900s.


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(CNN) — The first-time visitor quickly notices the pretty pastel houses and curious sculptures placed at intervals throughout the town — but the quaint facades and works of modern art signal merely the tip of the fascinating story behind a little known hillside labyrinth in Busan known as Gamcheon village.


Not on any standard travel itinerary, the village offers a stark contrast from the glitzy skyscrapers of “new Busan” or even the bustling markets of “old Busan.”


Instead, the eerily quiet village is a destination for a different type of traveler — one that’s not driven by foodie discovery or lazing on the beach, the primary reasons Koreans vacation in Busan.


Instead, Gamcheon lures travelers with an interest in art and history.



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Religious roots


The village has an unusual origin story.


Many accounts say Gamcheon began as a slum town in the 1950s filled with refugees from the aftermath of the Korean War, but the village actually owes its beginnings to an ascetic religious community called Taegeukdo, an obscure religion birthed during political upheavals in Korea in the early 1900s.


Although relatively scarce today, members of the Taegeukdo religion believe that the meaning of the universe can be found through a philosophy of “great polarity,” which incorporates the concepts of yin and yang.


The swirling blue and red Taegeuk symbol has been important throughout Korea’s history — it’s the symbol in the center of today’s South Korean flag.


In 1955, during the rebuilding phase that followed the Korean War, the city of Busan ordered some 800 families of the religious movement to move into designated area on a nearby hillside.


The religion’s headquarters also moved. It remains the preeminent landmark of the village today.


Meaningful layout, artistic rebirth


Unlike other area villages that sprang up in ad hoc fashion, Gamcheon’s multi-tiered communal layout was meticulously planned.


“By building the houses in tiers so that no house blocks any house behind it, the architectural layout of the village adheres to the Taegeukdo teaching of allowing others to prosper,” says Kim Kye-young, a local representative of the Taegeukdo religion.


Gamcheon’s art-themed makeover began in 2009, when it hosted a public art project and invited art students and artists to “decorate” the village.


While the villagers had for decades painted their own homes in pastel hues, artists added dozens of colorful touches throughout town, attaching nicknames such as “Korea’s Machu Picchu” (bizarre choice) and “Korea’s Santorini” (closer).


While the view is best from a high vantage point called “Sky Garden,” where the village information center is located (only Korean brochures and guides are available), the real delight lies in getting lost in the village’s maze of alleyways.


Each alley leads to a different surprise, from bird sculptures on roofs to Murakami-like playful installations in abandoned houses.


The quirkiest surprise is “The Little Prince,” from the French novel of the same name, sitting atop a fence, staring forlornly out at the Busan Harbor alongside his fox.


13691 130626115249 busan gamcheon culture village 13 story body Drought Shrinks Slightly, NOAA Issues Gloomy Outlook


Getting around


It’s almost impossible not to get lost. Each alley leads to three or four others.


One way to maintain your bearings is to “follow the fish” — painted schools that “swim” throughout the streets. Look closely and you’ll spot tiny people sitting on top of the fish, or kicking them in the eye.


“Photographers come and fall head over heels in love with the village,” says In Sik Kim, a local tour guide.


“But the villagers don’t like the fact that so many people are traipsing through their houses, and many of them are moving away. The houses don’t sell though, so they just abandon them.”


More than 300 local houses are estimated to be empty.


Artists are stepping in to turn many of them into exhibition spaces.


Some have been transformed into cafes and restaurants run by the town. Profits go back to the villagers.


Small, quiet and mostly hidden from the tourist path, Gamcheon isn’t ready for a flood of visitors. It prefers the occasional trickle that it has today.


“I don’t think fat foreigners can fit through these alleyways,” says another guide when asked about tours for foreigners.


“They’ll have to watch their heads every step, too. It’ll be very uncomfortable.”


How to get there


In Busan, take the subway to Toseong-dong Station or Goejeong Station, then take a taxi to Busan Gamjeong Elementary School (taxi will cost approximately $2.50).


Tour company Jane Tour DMC offers day tours in English from $300; +82 70 7393 2428


Gamcheon Culture Village, 10-13 Gamcheon-2-dong, Saha-gu, Busan, South Korea; +82 70 4219 5556; Sky Garden village information center open daily, 9 a.m.-6 p.m.


See more on CNNGo TV





From slum town to art village

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