<Anchor> The



representative works of Lee Kun-hee's collection donated to the state in April will be open to the public starting tomorrow (21st) at the National Museum of Korea and the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art.

In the midst of the Corona situation, you can watch it through advance reservation, but it is sold out until the middle of next month.



Reporter Lee Joo-sang on the sidewalk.



<Reporter> After the



long rainy season, fog rose everywhere, and waterfalls were created with the blowing water.



This is the appearance of Inwangsan in those days when Gyeomjae Jeongseon's confident brushstrokes stood out.




The 8.8cm-sized Buddha from the Three Kingdoms period is detailed and delicate.



On the other hand, the bronze incense burner of Goryeo has an overwhelming size of 83 cm, but it has a concise and understated elegance.




Among the 21,600 pieces of Lee Kun-hee's collection donated to the National Museum of Korea, 77 masterpieces by era and field will be open to the public first.



[Lee Soo-kyung/Curriculum Research Center of the National Museum of Korea: It occupies a wide range from prehistoric earthenware to gilt-bronze Buddhas from the Three Kingdoms period, Goryeo dynasties, and paintings from the Joseon period.] At the



National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, 58 representative works of Korean modern and contemporary masters are on display.



Nam-soon Paik, a first-generation female Western painter who studied in Paris during the Japanese colonial era, is creating her own world by mixing the images of East and West paradise.



The bull and the white cow were the favorites of Park Soo-geun, a genius painter Lee Jung-seop, who portrayed the daily lives of ordinary people on the streets of Seoul right after the Korean War.



The Lee Kun-hee collection is itself our modern and contemporary art history.



[Park Mi-hwa / National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Korea Curator Research Center: The biggest feature is that the collections were collected in a way that can be proud of, centered on Korean art history.] According to the



quarantine rules, the number of simultaneous visitors is limited to 20 and 30 people, respectively. is already sold out by the middle of next month.



(Video coverage: Kang Dong-cheol, video editing: Lee Hong-myeong, VJ: Oh Se-gwan)