Wednesday, December 12, 2007

Fashion Can Prolong Hangeul

Korean fashion designer Lie Sang-bong is one of the few designers whose breach reaches beyond Korean. His clothes are developed through designs of red, violet, and ultra black while being inspired through old films, historical romances, ancient poetry, and most importantly, letters from the Korean alphabet, Hangeul. I believe that this is a perfect example of modernized tradition. He “modernizes” Hangeul in order to create a greater appeal on the world-wide spectrum.

His latest item – a design which incorporated the Korean alphabet as a pattern for the dresses – was a major hit at the Paris Pret-a-Porter Collection in February 2002. Ever since, his trend of Hangeul has spread to not only his clothing line, but also to bed sheets, cell phones, and other accessories. He will soon even design a cigar with his Hangeul design too.

He became inspired by Hangeul through letters from two friends, singer Jang Sa-ik and artist Lim-Ok-sang. “If Jang's handwriting is like flowing water, Lim's handwriting is like fire bursting with energy,” Lie said. Thus came his first 51 dresses embellished and empowered through the flowing Hangeul letters at his first Paris Pret-a-porter Collection entitled “L'ombre Lunaire” in February 2002. He received very commending reviews.

“Most foreigners don't know that Korea has its own writing system,” Lie said. “They believe we might speak differently from the Chinese but use the same Chinese characters. After all, not all nations are lucky enough to have their own letters.” Thus I believe that he modernized “old Korean writing” originally being on paper, into “new Korean writing” onto flowing fabrics of contemporary clothing.

His design of incorporating Hangeul onto dresses has created the 2006 Hangeul Exposition: “Hangul Mode” in Who's Next & Premiere Classe. This exposition was composed of more than 40 designers, including those from overseas, developing their own ideas and designs pertaining to the Hangeul dress.

“Sooner or later you'll see foreigners wearing clothes that bear Hangeul all over the world,” Lie said. He then came to explain that celebrities in even Russia now wear clothing with Hangeul letters. Another Hangeul fashion show of his is the “Swinging East.” This show demonstrates the goodwill for Korea-China cultural exchange through. The clothing is composed of long dresses, decorated with Hangeul and Hangja, Chinese characters. He also includes a black dress in the hanbok design and belts with the traditional mother-of-pearl patters. While the models strut down the runway, the background music of this show is composed of traditional Korean drums, which add to the East Asian “mood.”

Lie stated a quote that really struck me for it was very relevant pertaining to our Kpop class. “It's fun working with Hangeul, which allows me to insert letters and poems. Then foreigners ask what all of these mean and I get to explain the content of the poem or piece of Korean history. I feel proud to have this opportunity to promote Korean culture. Koreans are so used to Hangeul that they've become dull to its true value and beauty. This is not so in the eyes of foreigners. The important thing is to re-create tradition in a modern way.”

http://www.korea.net/news/news/newsView.asp?serial_no=20070919013

1 comment:

malika said...

This definitely reminds me of the popularity of han zi/kanji characters on clothing in the U.S. A lot of people will even get those characters tattooed on themselves... it makes me wonder, if Korea gets larger in the eye of the West and Hangul becomes popular, will people start tattooing themselves with Hangul characters?!