My name is En-Uk Sequoya Hwang, and I was born on May 28, 1999 in Jerusalem, Israel. I started this blog to show my art.
I live in Seoul, South Korea with my older sister and my parents. My mother is Korean, and my father is American.
Is that the Korean flag without its black "I Ching" (易經, 역경) symbols? Or is that Planet Korea, traveling through space, like the Death Star in the old Star Wars movies, to destroy other planets?
On the Korean flag, there are usually four 역경 (in English we normally say "I Ching") markings, sets of three line segments called Ba Gua (팔괘) one in each corner: heaven, earth, fire, water. I was wondering where those markings went, or whether the yin/yang symbol was supposed to sit alone on a field of white, like a planet (Planet Korea!) traveling through space.
Is that the Korean flag without its black "I Ching" (易經, 역경) symbols? Or is that Planet Korea, traveling through space, like the Death Star in the old Star Wars movies, to destroy other planets?
ReplyDeleteWho won?
ReplyDeleteJeffery Hodges
* * *
Kevin I don't know what you mean.
ReplyDeleteKorea.
ReplyDeleteEn-Uk,
ReplyDeleteOn the Korean flag, there are usually four 역경 (in English we normally say "I Ching") markings, sets of three line segments called Ba Gua (팔괘) one in each corner: heaven, earth, fire, water. I was wondering where those markings went, or whether the yin/yang symbol was supposed to sit alone on a field of white, like a planet (Planet Korea!) traveling through space.
Kevin