NATIONAL FOLK MUSEUM OF KOREA,SEOUL
The National
Folk Museum of Korea, in Seoul, is Korea’s leading institution dedicated to
presenting traditional life, having more than two million visitors annually.
The Museum has been playing significant roles in providing educational and
cultural opportunities to understand how Koreans lived in traditional times.
Founded in 1945, the
NFMK has mainly focused on exclusive research on Korean folklore as well as
acquisition, preservation and exhibition of artifacts related to Koreans’ folk
life. Over the years, we have presented our curatorial activities in forms of
permanent and special exhibitions, various symposium and public education
programs including lectures. Today we are more focusing on customer services
than ever by adopting a more open and specialized approach to change paradigm
for museums in the 21st century. We are working to get closer to wider visitors
both offline and only as well as from home and abroad, at the same time we are
trying to make this website reflect what we are.
The National Folk
Museum of Korea is the only national museum devoted to the history of
traditional life, and most of the collection is closely related to the daily
routines and occupations of pre-modern Koreans. The diverse range of items
includes wooden kimchi containers acquired during a folk research project in
Gangwon Province mountain communities; skirts and jackets worn by newlywed
brides; Joseon-era ornaments unearthed from graves; farming implements, and
records of real estate transactions. The various pieces are organized and
classified according to function and exhibited in our three interior exhibition
halls and one open-air exhibition space.
Also, we are presenting special
exhibitions five times a year as well as maintaining Korea galleries at
overseas museums in cooperation with local museums and different foundations
for overseas Koreans and foreign visitors. These exhibitions help to introduce
Korean culture to non-Korean audiences and provide a chance for overseas
Koreans to learn about their ancestors’ homeland



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