• 제목/요약/키워드: Buddhist robe

검색결과 23건 처리시간 0.026초

한국불교 현행 승복에 관한 연구 -조계종과 태고종을 중심으로- (A Study on the Present Monk′s Costume of the Korean Buddhist -Focusing on Jokye and Taego Sects-)

  • 이은숙;김진구
    • 복식문화연구
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    • 제2권1호
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    • pp.77-91
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    • 1994
  • The Korean Buddhism has been an effect on the Korean culture from the spipitual culture to the living culture. The Korean Buddhist costume, as an external form of the Buddhist culture, symbolizes the Buddhist ideas, the status difference of the general public, and keeps the traditional structure. The purpose of this study was to examine the monk's costume of Jokye sect and Taego sect among 47 sects,. In this study, it selected Jokye sect and Taego sect, because they are occupying important positions in the Korean Buddhism. The methods of this study depended on the documentary records, existing remains, the wearing clothing, the interviews with monks. In a changeful times, It is needed to study the actual condition of the Buddhist costume and keeps records about it. The results of this study may be stated as follows: The Buddhist costuem is composed of Chogori, Baji, Haengjon(leggins), Durumagi, Jangsam, kasa, hats, rubber shoes, Jori and Gelmang, etc. Chogori, Baji, Haengjon, Durumagi as the everyday dress are found in the Korean traditional costume. The forms and kinds of the everyday dress were the same between two sects, but the colors were different. Jangsam and kasa are the formal robe. In regard to Jangsam, two sects ere dressed in gray. But there were differences of design between two sects. Kasa was different in the forms, patterns, colors, and kinds according to the legal system of the monk and the sects.

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한국가사의 상징성에 대한연구 -가사에 나타난 문양을 중심으로- (A Study on the Symbolical Significance in Korean Kasa - Focusing on the embroideries -)

  • 이순덕
    • 한국의류학회지
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    • 제16권2호
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    • pp.189-195
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    • 1992
  • Buddhism as one of alien thoughts has been developed conflicting and fusing with Korean Cultural bases. From these fusion process Korean Kasa (i.e, sacerdotal robe for Buddhist monk) also came into possession of different features from original Kasa which Buddhist Command- ment regulates or Kasa of South Asia which is the birthplace of Buddhism. 1. Original kasa was Pamsukula (i.e., a shabby, abandoned, muddy cloth), which did not permit special ornament or luxurious materal. However, we can find splendid colors, letters and embroideries in Korean Kasa. 2. These phenomenon originated from Three Treasures Faith, that is to say, the faith for three treasures, such as Buddha, Buddhist Commandment and Buddhist monk, which was formed by the fusion of Buddhism and conventional Shamanism. 3. Such letters as 천(Heaven), 왕(God). 영(om) stand for what shaped Guardian Deities protecting buddhist Sanctum. 4. The rmbroideries of three-legged bird, such as rabbit and toad, which symbolyze 일(sun) and 월(moon) stand for what shaped conventional divinities. 5. After Kasa possessing originally practical significance, such as Kasa Charity, was penetrated into Korea, it became the object of faith, possessing symbolical significance in addition.

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16세기 탱화에 나타난 조선전기 복식연구 (Study on the Costume of Early Joseon Dynasty Appearing in 16th Century Taenghwa)

  • 김소현
    • 복식
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    • 제64권1호
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    • pp.45-63
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    • 2014
  • In the Taenghwa(Buddhist paintings), the clothing habits of the times can be observed since it depicts the lives of people from all walks of life. These 16th century Taenghwas were drawn based on the understanding of the ritual costumes of early Joseon dynasty appearing in works such as oryeui Se-jong-sil-lok; Sejong chronicles and Gyong-guk-Dae-jon. It shows the perception of various types of clothing such as the Myeon-Bok(King's Full Dress), Won-yu-gwan-bok(King's Ceremonial Dress), and Gon-ryong-po(royal robe at work), and describes the early King's Won-yu-gwan-bok in the early Joseon dynasty that equips Bang-sim-gok-ryong(Round Neck Band). Various officials' uniforms and various men's coats are described. From it, one can visually verify the records of Joong-jong-sil-lok; Joongjong chronicles that describes the appearances of various hats and coats. They also tell us that Chang-ot(light outer coat) was worn prior to the 17th century. It also shows us that the ritual costume of women in Koryo was passed down to early Joseon. Also, in regards to the Buddhist priest costumes, the jang-sam's gray color and ga-sa's red color has been passed down until today. The most representative characteristic for clothing materials were horsehair, silk, ramie, hemp, and cotton.

조선중기 이후 가사(袈裟)의 유형과 변천 (The Types and Transition of Kasaya since the Mid Joseon Dynasty)

  • 강선정;조우현
    • 복식
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    • 제64권2호
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    • pp.17-34
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    • 2014
  • This is a theoretical and empirical study on Kasaya, the Buddhist monk's robe, which is one of the traditional Korean costumes that has kept it original form, as well as it being the most symbolic ritual costume in Buddhism. The purpose of the study is to see the different types of Kasaya, and the transitions it has gone through since Mid Joseon Dynasty. The analysis was performed after categorizing Kasaya in the following manner: layers, the way to wear, symbolism in construction, sewing, etc. Having a variety of Ilwolguangcheop(日月光貼) is a feature of Korean Red Kasaya. In the beginning, Its shape was very similar to shape of Hyungbae(胸背), and this was a royal gift and had the same meaning as an official uniform for a Buddhist monk. So designs of the Cheop(貼) could have been transformed from those of Hyungbae with a Buddhist twist. The conclusion of the study is as follows: Double layered Kasaya shows its transition from double layer to single layer. The fastening ornaments have been simplified in all materials from Yeongja(纓子). The latch type and three-paired Yeongja type transformed into hook type and one-paired Yeongja type. Color is the most common feature above all, and it is mainly in red. The form of Korean Kasaya has a significant relation with development of Buddhism. The integration of the Zen sect would have influenced the integration of Kasaya, which shows diversity throughout the period.

관중숭불도에 나타난 16세기 복식연구 (A Study of Costumes in the Palace Painting Depicting the Worship of Buddha during the Reign of King Myungjong)

  • 홍나영;김소현
    • 복식
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    • 제38권
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    • pp.305-321
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    • 1998
  • The costume style of the Chosun dynasty changed greatly after Imjinwaeran (the Japanese Invasion of Chosun Korea, 1592∼1598). Most of the extant costumes come from the late Chosun, but some costumes produced be-fore Imjinwaeran have been excavated, and in addition, information on these older constumes is contained in contemporary literature. Of especial value in the study of pre-Imjinwaeran Chosun constumes is a mid-sixteenth century palace painting depicting the worship of Buddha, a painting in the collection of the Ho-Am Art Museum in Seoul. The present study of costume during the middle Chosun dynasty focuses on this painting, and compares it with other contemporary palace paintings, and with other contemporary palace paintings, and with Nectar Ritual Paintings. The following conclusion were drawn : * Concerning woman's hair styles of the time, married women wore a large wig. Un-married women braided their hair, and then either let it fall down their back or wore it coiled on top of their head. * The major characteristic of woman's costumes was a ample, tube-like silhouette, with the ratio of the Jeogori(Korean woman's jacket) and skirt being one-to-one. * The style of Jeogori in the painting was like that of excavated remains. Some Jeogoris were simple (without decoration), while some Jeogoris were worn with red sashes. Here we can confirm the continuity of ancient Korean costumes with those of the sixteenth century * Although the skirt covered the ankles, it did not touch the ground. Because the breadth of the skirt was not wide, it seems to have been for ordinary use. Colors of skirts were mainly white or light blue. * All men in the painting wore a headdress. Ordinary men, not Buddhist monks, wore Bok-du (headstring), Chorip (straw hat), or Heuk-rip (black hat). In this painting, men wore a Heukrip which had a round Mojeong (crown). * The men wore sashes fastened around their waist to close their coats, which was different from the late Chosun, in which men bound their sashes around their chest. That gave a ration of the bodice of the coat to the length of the skirt of one-to-one, which was consistent with that of woman's clothing. * In this painting, we cannot see the Buddhist monk's headdress that appeared later in the Chosun, such as Gokkal (peaked hat), Songnak (nun's hat), and Gamtu (horsehair cap). These kinds of headdresses, which appeared in paintings from the seventeenth century, were worn widely inside or outside the home. Buddhist monks wore a light blue long coat, called Jangsam (Buddhist monk's robe) and wore Gasa (Buddhist monk's cope), a kind of ceremonial wrap, round their body. We can see that the Gasa was very splendid in the early years of the Chosun dynasty, a continuing tradition of Buddhist monk's costumes from the Koryo dynasty.

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6세기 푸난 목조불상에 대한 시론(試論) (A Preliminary research on Sixth-century Wooden Buddha Images from Funan)

  • 노남희
    • 미술자료
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    • 제99권
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    • pp.10-29
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    • 2021
  • 본 논문은 지금의 베트남 남부 메콩강 삼각주 지역에서 출토된 목조불상에 대한 시론적인 연구이다. 지금까지 알려진 바에 의하면 메콩강 삼각주 지역에서는 약 서른여 점의 목조불상이 출토되었다. 이들은 옥 에오(Oc Eo) 등 동남아 최초의 국가였던 푸난(Funan)의 주요 유적지에서 발견되었고, 대개 6세기 무렵으로 추측되므로 푸난의 불상으로 간주할 수 있다. 이 불상들은 석조불상과 함께 동남아 초기 불상의 양상을 보여준다는 점에서 중요한 자료이다. 푸난 목조불상은 방사성탄소연대측정법과 양식적 특징을 종합하면 대부분 6세기 무렵에 만들어진 것으로 보인다. 현재까지 공개된 푸난 목조불상 가운데 형상을 비교적 확실히 알아볼 수 있는 8점에 대해 도상과 양식을 분석하였는데, 이들은 자세와 착의법, 수인에 따라 네 가지 유형으로 구분할 수 있었다. 세장한 신체와 몸에 달라붙는 대의의 표현은 기본적으로 인도 굽타시대 사르나트 불상 양식을 공통적으로 따르고 있었으나, 유형에 따라서는 직립한 자세와 편단우견형의 착의법, 스리랑카 불상에서 주로 보이는 설법인(vitarka mudra)을 보이는 등, 남인도 불상 양식도 발견할 수 있었다. 이는 푸난의 불교조각가들이 인도의 주요 불상 양식을 적절히 섞어 새로운 불상 양식을 창안했음을 알려준다. 이와 함께 주목되는 것은 푸난 목조불상의 출토 현황이다. 같은 유적에서 발견된 비슷한 시기의 힌두신상은 나무로 만들어진 예를 찾아볼 수 없는 데 반해, 불상만은 유독 나무로 많이 만들어진 현상에 대하여 불상과 나무라는 재질 사이에는 단순한 제작상의 이유가 아닌 보다 밀접한 관계가 있을 수 있음을 상정해 보았다. 불교 문헌상 전해지는 최초의 불상은 바로 전단목이라는 나무로 만들어진 '우전왕상'이다. 우전왕상은 비슷한 시기인 6세기 무렵 중국 남조에도 알려져 있었는데, 흥미롭게도 남조에는 푸난에서 가져왔다는 '전단서상'이 있었다고 전한다. 이는 우전왕상에 대한 이야기가 푸난에도 공유되어 있었을 가능성을 시사하며, 나아가 푸난에서 나무로 불상을 다수 제작하게 된 주요 동인으로 작용했을 가능성이 있다.

GIS산업진흥법(가칭)의 기본체계 도출에 관한 연구 (A Study on the Basic Structure of GIS Industry Promotional Laws)

  • 이국철
    • 한국전자통신학회논문지
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    • 제3권1호
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    • pp.46-52
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    • 2008
  • 본 연구는 국내 GIS산업의 성장과 국제경쟁력 향상을 제도적으로 뒷받침할 수 있는 GIS산업진흥법의 기본체계를 도출하는데 목적이 있다. 우선 국내외에서 발표된 관련 문헌의 고찰을 통해 GIS산업의 현황, 문제점 그리고 발전전망 등을 검토하였다.

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한국에서 백의호상(白衣好尙) 현상이 고착된 배경에 관한 논의 - 유창선(劉昌宣)의 백의고(白衣考)를 중심으로 - (Discussion on the Background of the Baekeuihosang Phenomenon in Korea - Focusing on Baekeuigo written by Yoo, Changseon -)

  • 서봉하
    • 복식
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    • 제64권1호
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    • pp.152-164
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    • 2014
  • Korean people have revered the white color and enjoyed wearing white clothes. Various kinds of white clothes have been worn by the Korean people, ranging from everyday wear(便服), and scholar's robe(深衣) for the upper class, to religious costumes like Buddhist monk's robe(僧服), shaman costumes(巫服) and costumes for ancestral rites(祭服), or mourning(喪服). There have been many differing opinions by historians regarding the background of this Baekeuihosang(白衣好尙, the preference for white clothing) tradition and even now, it is frequently being discussed. This study aims to consider and discuss the background of this Baekeuihosang tradition, focusing on Chang-seon Yoo's Baekeuigo(白衣考, the consideration of white clothing), which was published in Dong-A Ilbo in 1934. The purposes of studying literature such as the Baekeuigo is to analyze the arguments on the origin of Baekeuihosang, to analyze Chang-seon Yoo's claim of its origin, and to discuss the culture of Baekeuihosang. Chang-seon Yoo claimed that the existing discussions on the background of Baekeuihosang based on the lack of dyes, or undeveloped technique, economic privation and national control strayed from historical facts, according to literature review. It is not worth discussing the farfetched arguments such as the use of costumes for ancestral rites as everyday wears, or the nation of sorrow. Baekeuihosang tradition mostly originated from the effects of many religions and the taste for innocence, or naturalness. White clothes were infused with the sorrow and emotion of Korean people and were also worn to show resistance to foreign power as symbols of ethnicity. Therefore, there should be a new view of the discussion of white clothes and Korean aesthetic sense, away from the logic distorted by the Japanese colonial view of history.

제주의 불교미술과 자복미륵 (A study of Jeju Buddhist art and Bok-sin Maitreyas)

  • 이경화
    • 헤리티지:역사와 과학
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    • 제51권3호
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    • pp.104-121
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    • 2018
  • 제주 불교미술에 대한 관심은 한국미술에서 조금 소외되어 있는 편이다. 이 글은 주요 제주 불교미술에 대한 서술과 자복미륵에 중점을 두어 분석하였다. 제주의 불교문화는 고려후기에 흥기하였다. 법화사는 원 황실의 원찰이자 고려의 비보사찰이었다. 묘련사에서는 1296년에 고려 조정에서 내린 불전을 받들어 제주도판을 다시 새겼고 이는 제주의 지식문화를 시사한다. 수정사 청석탑 부재에 새겨진 금강역사상은 고려 후기의 회화로 주목된다. 불탑사 오층석탑은 제주 현무암으로 만들어졌고 14세기 전반경의 체화된 제주불교미술이다. 제주의 조선시대 불교미술에서 자복미륵은 민간신앙화된 미륵의 세 유형을 합성하여 독특한 모습이다. 자복미륵은 원정모와 관복을 착용하였으며, 석인상형 미륵처럼 좌우에 놓여 지역을 살피고 지키며, 튀어나온 눈으로 호위하는 역사(力士)인 신장상형 미륵의 특징을 수용하였다. 따라서 자복미륵은 조선시대 세속화된 미륵의 유형을 분석하는 데에 의미 있는 형식이다. 자복미륵을 이해하는 데에 특기할 불상이 1471년 파주 용미리 마애이불병립상, 1491년경 옥천 대성사 석불, 광주 십신사지 석불 등이다. 원정모형 보개를 지닌 불상은 조선전기에 집중되는 것으로 보인다. 그것은 미륵을 조선으로 끌어들여, 조선을 건설한 신진사대부의 모습에 기인하여 변형되었을 가능성이 있다고 보여 진다. 공교롭게 옥천 대성사 석불입상의 조성에 제주목사를 역임하는 육한이 참여한 것으로 추정된다. 자복미륵은 그러한 불상들의 지역에 따른 변형에도 불구하고 연결고리를 확인하여 주었다.

조선시대 직물에 나타난 보배무늬의 변화 경향과 구성 유형 (Changing Trends and Classification of Composition Styles of Treasure Patterns on Textiles in Joseon Period)

  • 조효숙;이은진
    • 복식
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    • 제65권7호
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    • pp.32-46
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    • 2015
  • Treasures patterns are simplified designs of vessels used in everyday life, which were symbols of luck. Treasures patterns on textiles are largely assorted into four groups: eight auspicious patterns of Buddhism, eight immortal patterns of Taoism, seven treasures patterns of King Chakravarti in the Buddhist Scriptures and normal treasures patterns. Among them normal treasures patterns are most commonly used. Records in the Joseon documents show these patterns as being composed of seven treasures patterns or eight treasures patterns. But observation of the actual relics show that these patterns ranged from four to ten patterns. Korean traditional textiles treasures patterns began to appear in Korea on the relics of the last of Goryeo period. They were used as sub-patterns among main patterns of dynamically rising cloud patterns with five heads. Treasures patterns in the early Joseon period were commonly used as sub-patterns, and cloud and treasures pattern were prime examples of this. In the 16th century, lotus vine pattern, small flower vine pattern, or small flower pattern were often used as main patterns and treasures patterns were regularly used as sub-patterns. The robe of the Great Monk of Seo San was unique, in that both main and sub patterns consisted of the treasures patterns. From the 17th century, treasures patterns began to be used as main patterns. For example, a relic with eight alternatively arranged treasures patterns were found. Though there were still some cases where the patterns were used as sub-patterns, they begin to appear bigger than the previous period and became similar to main patterns in size. In the 18th and 19th centuries, there were various cases where treasures patterns were combined with flowers, fruits, animals, and letter patterns and used as main patterns. And there are many different methods of representing and developing the patterns.