Pyeongchon Central Park
Pyeongchon Central Park | |
Hangul | 평촌중앙공원 |
---|---|
Hanja | 平村中央公園 |
Revised Romanization | Pyeongchon jung ang Gongwon |
Pyeongchon Central Park is a public park in the central part of Dongan-gu, Anyang in Gyeonggi-do, South Korea. Pyeongchon Central Park was opened on 31 December 1993 with a total space of approximately 119,843 square metres (1,289,980 sq ft).[1]
Pyeongchon Central Par is located next to the Acro Towers and Hagwon-ga to the south, with Anyang City Hall one block directly north. The park's main feature is a complex fountain system connected by artificial streambeds.
The park includes tennis courts, a soccer field, basketball courts, badminton courts, gateball court(croquet lawn), in-line skate park, an performance stage, concession stand, and an X-game court, where skaters can practice stunts. There are also quite a few statues and fountains. A free large community aerobics class takes place regularly in the evenings at center of the park, where free concerts are sometimes held.
The street on the park's north side is closed off to traffic on weekends, and used for flea markets and as a course for kids to drive tiny cars and motorcycles and the citizen play to various ways
Featured Artworks
A tea house(Rirkrit Tiravanija, 2007)
A tea house created by tilting a traditional Korean house 45 degrees. The artist, who is concerned with the social role of art, has experimented with issues such as the boundary between arts and everyday life, interaction between public and private spheres, and communication between group and individual, within the sphere of arts.In this context, the artist made and served food to audiences at his exhibitions, transformed an exhibition space into an apartment, and created a backpack containing cooking utensils and maps. The artist, who had existing interest in the function of tea houses prior to this project, produced a cube shaped tea house made of stainless steel for the Villa Manin Centre for Contemporary Art (Italy) in 2005. For the tea house he created for the 2nd APAP(ANYANG PUBLIC ART PROJECT) at the Pyeongchon Central Park(Pyeongchon Jung ang Park), the artist takes its motive from Eastern tea houses, which functioned as a space for meditation as well as for conversation and social interaction.[2]
Time Keeper(Gloria Friedmann, 2007)
A man stands on a globe which has time from around the world. He doesn't see the time but the clock just keeps on ticking. The artist suggests that the people look back on their lives in flowing time through the work.
Facilities
- x-game, badminton court
- Pyeongchon Central Park soccer field
Events
The Summer festival takes place at the end of August at Pyeongchon Central Park. It involves a festival of wind instruments with contests, invitation performances and a parade.
The Fall festival is at the beginning of October and takes place at Pyeongchon Central Park. It is a celebration of life in Anyang with a citizens festival featuring plays, food and markets. And many singers who(invited Anyang citizen festival) are performance for Anyang Citizen.
Gallery
In winter
- Pyeongchon Central Park
- Pyeongchon Central Park
- Pyeongchon Central Park
- Pyeongchon Central Park Statue1
- Pyeongchon Central Park (meditation)
- Pyeongchon Central Park (dung beetle)
- Pyeongchon Central Park (a family)
External links
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=63bSSGBZDDE Helicam view1
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7m_It92916Y Helicam view2
References
- ↑ "http://www.anyang.go.kr/anyang/m15/m15_06/m15_06_02/m15_06_02_01/m15_06_02_01_01.jsp". Retrieved 15 November 2014. External link in
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(help) - ↑ "THE 4TH ANYANG PUBLIC ART PROJECT: PUBLIC STORY". http://apap.or.kr/. Retrieved 23 November 2014. External link in
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