Sin Yun-bok, better known by his art name Hyewon, was a Korean painter of the Joseon period. Like his contemporaries Danwon and Geungjae, he is known for his realistic depictions of daily life in his time. His genre paintings are distinctly more erotic than Danwon's, a fact which contributed to his expulsion from the royal painting institute, Dohwaseo. Painting was frequently a hereditary occupation in the Joseon period, and Hyewon's father and grandfather had both been court painters. Together with Danwon and the later painter Owon, Hyewon is remembered today as one of the "Three Wons" of Joseon-period painting.
Sin Yun-bok
Waiting (기다림)
Woman with a cap (처네를쓴 여인)
Women at fish market (어물장수)
Kim Hong-do was a Korean painter during the Joseon dynasty. He is mostly remembered for his depictions of the everyday life of ordinary people, in a manner analogous to painters of the Dutch Golden Age. He was also widely known by his art name Danwon (단원).
Kim Hong-do
신언인도 (1773) Indian Prophet
Gunseondo 군선도 (1776) The Nineteen Taoist Immortals
ChongSeokJeong