Tag Archives: Irish

IAK presents: BATTLE OF THE BANDS!

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The Irish Association of Korea are proud to announce a battle of the bands. Taking place on the 12th and 13th of December this is a chance for your band to show off it’s talent. Friday night is open to all bands as long as they play at least one song with an Irish connection/theme/style. The best four bands will be selected and then on Saturday each band will play slightly longer sets. A panel of judges will decide on who wins the over all event.

The winning band will receive ONE MILLION WON and will also be invited to play at the IAK annual St. Patrick’s Day festival which attracts a crowd of 5,000 – 10,000 people annually! The three runners up will also receive 100,000 won on the night. Any band interested in entering can send an email to iak.christmas@gmail.com.

So come on out and show us what you have to offer, it promises to be a weekend filled with good music and wonderful company!

Also check below for T & C’s

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Battle of the Bands(KOR)

RASKB-Blue Dalmation photography workshop series

Or very own Tom Coyner is hosting this series of workshops. All the details are here;

RASKB-Blue Dalmatian Workshop series begins on Saturday, May 24th, 7:00 pm.

Please note we reserve the right to switch around the topics by month, based on workshop participants’ and facilitators’ preferences and requirements.  But as things stand, we have scheduled the following workshops:
 
May 24 – Getting to Know Your Digital Equipment – review of proper use of the basics and intro to the rarely used functions, including those used by professionals, that make up 90% of most equipment’s features. This first workshop is priced with an introductory 50% discount. 
 
June 21(?) – Korean Landscapes (field trip workshop): basics and handling unique Korean challenges
 
July – Informal Portraitures: basics and cultural nuances
 
August – Street Photography – Gangnam Style: dealing with Korean strangers on the streets of Gangnam
 
September – Lighting & Color: controlling and creating photo environments in Korea
 
October – On-site Application of What’ve Learned at Gyeongbug-gung (field trip workshop)
 
November – Evaluating One’s Own and Other’s Photo Portfolios
 
December – Exhibition: Seoul location to be determined
 
Future/Concurrent Workshops: 
 
Fine Art Photography (workshop series)
 
Applying Leadership Skills to Your Photography (single workshop)
 
* Korea, Thailand, Cambodia, etc. 3- and/or 5-day Photography Workshops (from 2015)
 

One does not need to participate in all or even a majority of the workshops.  However, regular participation is rewarded by having professional photo critiques by Sang, an experienced photographic arts professor, which will take place during each subsequent workshop’s review of the past month’s photographic challenge photo assignment.

Map and directions to the Workshop (may also be seen at https://www.facebook.com/BlueDalmatianPhoto):
Spring Studio in the basement of 107-12 Nonhyeon 2-dong, Gangnam-gu, Seoul.

WALKING DIRECTIONS (5 minutes total): Come out Exit 3 of Gangnam-gu Office subway station on (Olive) Line 7. Go straight, with the street on one’s left. Pass the first alley (Hakdong 47-gil) and go 1 short block to Hakdong 45-gil (separates a coffee shop from a pharmacy). Turn right on Hakdong 45-gil, and go down the hill to a T-intersection facing the 우림 Motel. Take a left and go up the hill to just one block short of the main intersection at the top of the hill. Turn right at a multi-story noodle store on the right, on to Hakdong 41-gil alley. Go 3 short blocks. The studio is in the basement of a four-story building on the right with a coffee shop on the first (ground) floor.




Please bring your camera with you to the May 24th workshop!  

Please bring your friends to the workshops – but kindly have them to register with Tom Coyner first at tomcoyner@gmail.com or by phone at 010-9099-6195! 

The first 3-hour workshop, that starts from 7:00 pm, on Saturday, May 24, in Nonhyon-dong (Gangnam), is W50,000, or W45,000 for RAS members.  The subsequent workshops will also be 3 hours long at double that fee rate.  We are building the workshop series so that the total value will be greater than the sum of the individual workshops through ongoing individual monthly photo challenges/critiques.  There will be a photo exhibition of the workshop’s photographs in December.  In any case, people pay at the door in cash at each workshop.

The workshops are being led  by Sang-Bum Lim, a bilingual Korean fine arts photographer who studied 6 years at the Brooks Institute in Santa Barbara, California as well as worked as a commercial photographer and journalist in the US.  He is now teaching at Daegu Arts University and Choong-Ang University.  He has almost 20 years teaching experience.  I have been doing photography for 40 years and have taught workshops for the Royal Asiatic Society, Korea Branch and the US Embassy in Korea.

The workshops are very much individual photographer oriented so as to be able to provide genuine value at amateur to professional skill levels.

The first workshop will take place in a professional studio and we will return there for portraits workshop later this year.  I will uniquely dominate this first workshop, but Sang will take over the workshop at the end.  The first half of the workshop will be a presentation on the latest trends in digital gear as well as tricks and tips that the professionals use in their shooting that most amateurs are unaware.  Following that, Sang and I will consult each participation on questions and issues regarding current and possible future equipment.  Sang will then give a presentation on his fine art and documentary photography.  We will conclude the evening with Sang assigning a photographic challenge for the participants to take on during the coming four week.  Optionally, following the formal session, we will have a survey of the local beer found near the workshop location.

 
All participants will receive a 70+-page PDF equipment and tips guide that is reviewed during on the workshop.
 
Most of the future workshops will be outside, with a strong “hands on” orientation with Sang and me working closely with individuals.  The first workshop will be focusing on people being adequately up to speed with their digital equipment  There will be a lecture on some of the less obvious basics, some not well known tricks employed by seasoned professionals, extensive one-on-one cons

Sang and I look forward to meeting you all on May 24th.  

    Tom Coyner

   Onsite Studios Asia
studio-quality photography
  tel: +82-10-9099-6195

 

HBC Festival 2014- The Irish acts.

The HBC festival is happening this weekend, May 16th, 17th and 18th. The entire schedule and run down of acts can be found on their website.

Here are some acts involving our very own Irish….

Friday: Magna Fall will p lay at 11pm in Philly´s Basement

Friday: Ceolteori Seoul will play in VFW at 11pm

Saturday; Baekma will play in Rabbit Hole at 8pm

We´ll keep the list updated as we get the details.

 

Blue Dalmation Photo

Blue Dalmatian Photo: Photo Workshops that Cross Cultural Divides

 “Blue Dalmatian Photo” founders/instructors Tom Coyner and Sang-bum (“Sang”) Lim have agreed with the Royal Asiatic Society Korea Branch (RAS Korea) to launch a series of 7 monthly “RAS Photo Workshops.” The three-hour workshops are designed for English-speaking photographers of all skill levels, whether or not they are members of the RAS. The workshops are believed to be the first ever to address the cross-cultural challenges of photography in Korea.

 Says Tom Coyner: “Sang and I know that the camera is the strongest potential tool to build relationships – especially when one is in a foreign country. But too many people approach photography in such a way that the camera becomes an obstacle, something that intimidates both the photographer and the subject. We recognize a genuine need to help people develop both their photographic and cultural skills.”

 Lim is a professor of photography at Daegu Arts University. A graduate of Chung-Ang University with a BA in photography, Lim also studied for 6 years at The Brooks Institute, a prestigious photography school in Santa Barbara, California. Besides being a well-known fine art photographer and having worked full time as an American photo-journalist and commercial photographer, Lim has taught photography for almost 20 years. Coyner has photographed for over 40 years in the U.S., Japan and Korea. He recently conducted regular photography workshops for the RAS for almost 18 months.

Beyond imparting essential photo skills, the workshops will mainly focus on how to create wonderful images and memories when visiting or living in another, foreign culture. Naturally, Koreans are also welcome to participate in these English-language workshops. In order to cover expenses and in recognition of the workshop preparation and facilitation time by the two professional instructors, each participant will be asked to pay a tuition fee of KW 100,000 for each 3-hour workshop. Current RAS Korea members are entitled to a KW 10,000 discount.

Workshop Topics

  • May – Getting to Know Your Digital Equipment – review of proper use of the basics and intro to the rarely used functions, including those used by professionals, that make up 90% of most equipment’s features
  • June – Korean Landscapes: basics and handling unique Korean challenges
  • July – Informal Portraitures:  basics and cultural nuances
  • August – Street/Decisive Moment Photography:  dealing with Korean strangers
  • September – Lighting & Color: controlling and creating photo environments in Korea
  • October – On-site Application of What’ve Learned at Gyeongbug-gung
  • November – Evaluating One’s Own and Other’s Photo Portfolios
  • December – Exhibition: Seoul location to be determined

Future/Concurrent Workshops

  • Fine Art Photography (workshop series)
  • Applying Leadership Skills to Your Photography (single workshop)
  • Korea, Thailand, Cambodia, etc. 3- and/or 5-day Photography Workshops (from 2015)

 

The first workshop will take place on Saturday, May 24, starting at 7:00 pm, at Spring Studio in Nonhyon-dong, Seoul. More information, please go to https://www.facebook.com/BlueDalmatianPhoto.  To register for the workshops or for answers to your questions, please contact Tom Coyner at tomcoyner@gmail.com or at 010-9099-6195. For Korean language inquiries, please contact Sang-bum Lee at sajinmaul@gmail.com or at 010-5159-9693.

 

Boxty Rebellion in Seoul!

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Boxty Rebellion, the Irish folk band are flying into Korea to entertain us for St. Patrick’s Day.

The festival itself takes place in Sindorim, D Cube plaza (Sindorim subway station Lines 1 & 2 Exit 1) on Saturday, March 15th from 12pm to 6pm. This is a family day with story telling, face painting, audience dancing, traditional Irish music and the opportunity to try your hand at some Irish sports.

Boxty Rebellion will join Dara Sheahan, Tap Pung, Sweet Murphy’s Fancy, Bard and Nanah Mc Glennon’s Dance troup on the main stage.

That night the party continues in Rocky Mountain Tavern, Itaewon (Exit 3 walk straight 250 metres) where the IAK Fundraising Hooley will take place from 6pm until late. There will be live traditional Irish music, live bands and the rugby match will be televised at 2am. Tickets on the door are 10,000won.

If you want to catch Boxty Rebellion either side of the weekend, here is where they are performing;

Wolfhound (Friday 14th 11pm),

Rocky Mountain Tavern (Hooley),( Saturday 15th entertainment from 7.30pm),

Maloney’s (Sunday 4pm) 

Sam Ryans (Sunday March 16th from 7.30pm).

 Come out to the festival on March 15th to see them perform for the St. Patrick’s Day festival. More details irishassociationkorea@gmail.com

ARE YOU IRISH & LIVING ABROAD? WE WANT YOU!

ARE YOU IRISH & LIVING ABROAD? WE WANT YOU! 
 
Coco Television are looking for Irish people around the world to send a “Happy St. Patrick’s Day” video message back home to be included in this years coverage of the St. Patricks’s Festival Parade shown on RTÉ 1. All you need to do is record yourself on a mobile phone, digital camera or any video device and send to – parade2014@cocotelevision.ie
 
To give us a sense of where you are in the world, choose a backdrop that shows off the location e.g  the Taj Mahal, Ayers Rock, Golden Gate Bridge or the beach in Thailand
 
PLEASE NOTE:
Your clip cannot have any association with alcohol.
Your message must not exceed 8 seconds in duration.
Example of message: “Hello to everyone back home in Ireland, Happy St. Patrick’s day from New York”   
 
The deadline for submissions is Saturday 15th March 2013.

10 Things You Didn’t Know About Ireland

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10. Saint Patrick was neither a Saint nor Irish!

Many people are completely oblivious to why Irish people all over the world celebrate St. Patricks Day. Why do over 2 million people show up to watch the parade in New york City,  why do they go as far as dying the river green in Chicago and why do 100,000′s of people in Ireland hold a week long festival  around this time every year. Well it is all in the name of Saint Patrick…despite that NOT being his real name and him not been born in Ireland. St. Patrick was actually born in Britain and was named Maewyn.  Irish raiders captured him during an attack and took him to Ireland, heolding him captive for over six years. He later changed his name to Patricius, or Patrick, which derives from the Latin term for “father figure,” when he became a Priest.

9. Potatoes are NOT from Ireland

So turns out St Patrick is no more Irish than potatoes. Which, by the way, originally grew in Chile as far back as 500 BC and only arrived in Ireland as late as the 16th Century. Madness, we know! On the subject of potatoes, or spuds as we call them back home, people in Uganda have a very special name they call mashed potatoes. In Uganda, if you want some mash with your dinner you must simply order some “Irish”.

8. U2 isn’t even Irish!

Well not all of them anyway. In fact not only is half the band NOT Irish but they hail ……ENGLAND!! Both The Edge and Adam Clayton were born in London and Oxfordshire to Welsh and English parents respectively. Only Bono and Larry Mullen are Irish true an true!

7. The Shamrock represents the Holy Trinity

St. Patrick is famous for bringing Christianity to Ireland around A.D. 432. Legend says that St Patrick chose the shamrock as a symbol of the Christian church, its three leaves representing the Holy Trinity: God, Son and the Holy Spirit, joined together by a common stalk. By by the time of St. Patrick’s died on March 17, 461 (thus why we celebrate St. Patric’s Day on March 17th)  he had created a number of churches, schools and monasteries around Ireland dedicated to Christianity.

6. It is illegal to drink on the streets in Ireland!

Everyone imagines Irish people stumbling around the streets of Dublin, pint in hand singing to our hearts content. The reality is a little sobering. Drinking on the street or anywhere outside of a licensed premise is in fact illegal in Ireland. Pubs, bars and clubs  are all  closed by 2.30am, a time that could well be one of the earliest closing times out of all cities in Europe!

5. Everyone wants to be Irish!

This isn’t some light hearted joke, “har har har sure everybody wants to be Irish on St Patrick’s day!” No! This is actually a fact. How is it that while the population of Ireland, which is a tiny Island really, is only about 4 million (and decreasing every day tahnks to mass emigration) yet over 80 MILLION people worldwide claim Irish ancestry and hold Irish passports or dual citizenship!

4. There are OVER 1,000 pubs in Dublin

Considering the fact that Dublin has barely 1 million inhabitants, and thus is could practically be called a village compared to the bright lights of Seoul, it’s hard to believe there are over 1,000 pubs in the city. Many say it is actually impossible to cross the city, from North to South, without passing a pub. Not that anyone would want to do that!

3. Saint Valentine’s ashes are in Ireland

We may not have St. Patrick, but we do have Saint Valentine! The remains of St Valentine, the Patron Saint of Love and Lovers, are held in the Whitefriars Street Carmelite Church in Dublin. They were discovered in the early 1800s in Rome and some three decades later were given to a Dublin priest by Pope Gregory XVI. After nearly a century in storage, the relics were rediscovered about 50 years ago and are now housed in a shrine at the church, beneath a statue of the saint holding a crocus flower. I think few people are aware of this one

2. St Patrick drove the snakes out of Ireland

According to legend, in addition to bringing Christianity to Ireland, St. Patrick was also credited with driving unwanted slithering reptiles out of Ireland in the 5th century. However, his job may have been quite easy, considering there weren’t any snakes to drive off the island in the first place!

1. Ireland’s Official language does not have words for “yes” and “no” 

The official first language of the Republic of Ireland is not English, it’s Irish (otherwise known as called Gaelic). While most people use English as their first language, as much as 40% of Ireland’s citizens consider themselves to be competent in Irish and must learn it in school from the age of 4  until 18.  One of Irish’s many curiosities compared to English is the absence of words that directly translate into “yes” or “no.”  Rather, Irish speakers answer questions requiring a positive or negative by verb repetition. For example, When asked if someone is “Going to the pub?,” the answer might be “I am,” as opposed to “yes.”