Hand Carved Bird and Fish
$350.00

includes materials

Instructor: Jongkuk Lee
Monday - Wednesday
June 9 - 11
1pm - 3pm
5 sessions

Day 1 : Using found pieces of pine wood with a branch, participants will carve birds which signify good fortune.

Day 2: Using found pieces of pine wood, participants will carve fish which signifies fertility, prosperity and vigilance

Become a Member
from $50.00

Add a donation for an individual membership, family membership, or pay it forward to contribute to our scholarship program.

Day 3: Participants will work on finishing the carved objects by putting oil, or carbon powder or carving design. 

Jongkuk Lee, a renowned nature artist, specializes in Hanji (Korean traditional paper). His materials are sourced from nature, even from his homegrown, paper mulberry trees. He is currently based in Cheongju, South Korea, where he serves as Director of Mabuel Gallery. In the 1990s, Lee settled in Bulat Village near Cheongju, which was long famous for its tradition of making Hanji, but as the demand for Hanji declined due to urbanization and industrial development, few were left in the village to continue the tradition. Lee's passion for making Hanji, as well as his perspectives on the creative process as part of nature's symbiotic relationship with humans, has been a driving force for the revitalization of Hanji in the village.

Lee prompts us to reflect on how we can turn resources into artwork and commodities. He strives to create objects by examining the qualities and usability of different natural materials such as bamboo and silver grass (common redd). This approach to art is his way of responding to the current global ecological crisis.