Celadon Violin: Ten Symbols of Longevity Motif, 2020
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This piece is chosen by those who understand that an object may carry the memory of one tradition while being transformed completely by another.
“It appears to be a violin, yet what it truly holds is a landscape of blessing.”
Created by Kwon O Hak, a master ceramic artisan of Icheon, this celadon violin sculpture is a work of cultural translation. It takes the recognisable form of the Western violin and remakes it through the language of Korean ceramic tradition. The result is neither a conventional instrument nor a novelty object, but a carefully conceived sculptural form in which engineering silhouette, symbolic decoration, and ceramic refinement converge.
The most immediate point of transformation lies in the surface. Rather than polished wood, the body is covered in a quiet celadon glaze, whose soft blue-green depth evokes the esteemed colour tradition of Korean ceramics. This glaze alters the emotional register of the violin form. What is typically associated with resonance, tension, and performance is here rendered still, contemplative, and enduring. The object no longer suggests sound alone; it suggests atmosphere.
Across that celadon field unfolds the imagery of sipjangsaeng, the Ten Symbols of Longevity: the sun, mountains, water, clouds, crane, turtle, deer, bamboo, pine, and the herb of immortality. These are not incidental decorative details. In Korean visual culture, they are among the most enduring symbols of auspicious life, constancy, protection, and long duration. Their presence transforms the violin into a bearer of blessing. It is no longer simply an object shaped like an instrument, but a ceramic emblem of longevity and spiritual abundance.
The composition is especially effective because the violin body lends itself naturally to pictorial unfolding. Its upper and lower bouts create zones of expansion and concentration, while the central narrowing directs the eye vertically. Kwon O Hak uses these curves as a pictorial landscape: the red sun appears as a focal accent, while cranes, pine, deer, rocks, bamboo, and flowing water animate the surface in layered relation. The motifs do not sit on the form as mere ornament; they inhabit it, allowing the object to be read almost as a vertical landscape painting translated into ceramic relief and inlay.
This act of translation is crucial to the work’s meaning. The violin is one of the most recognisable forms in Western classical culture, associated with discipline, harmony, and refined musical structure. By reimagining that form through celadon and sipjangsaeng imagery, the artist proposes a dialogue rather than a contrast. Korean tradition does not retreat before the imported form; it enters it, redefines it, and makes it speak in another symbolic language.
The technical demands of the work reinforce this significance. A violin shape is made of complex curves, asymmetrical tensions, and narrow transitional zones that are difficult even in wood, and especially challenging in ceramic. The maker had to preserve the integrity and symmetry of the overall silhouette while preventing distortion during drying and firing. At the same time, the decorative imagery required refined execution so that the motifs would remain legible without overwhelming the form. The integration of structure and ornament is therefore not secondary, but central to the work’s achievement.
It is also important that this piece is not meant for performance. Its purpose is not acoustic function, but visual and cultural resonance. Freed from the demands of sound production, the violin becomes an image-body—an object through which material tradition, auspicious symbolism, and cross-cultural imagination can be held together. In exhibition, this gives the work unusual power: it is familiar in outline, yet transformed in substance.
What makes the piece memorable is precisely this doubleness. It retains the poise of the violin while becoming something else entirely: a celadon sculpture of blessing, an object in which Korean ideas of longevity are carried by a form associated with Western classical refinement. It is at once disciplined and poetic, recognisable and reinterpreted, still and full of meaning.
Dimensions
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Height- 58cm
- Width- 21cm
- Depth- 9.5cm
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