Hwang Gi-chun
Hwang Gi-Chun (황기천, 1760–1821) was a Korean painter of the late Joseon period. He had several pen names, including Chang-Won (昌原), Hee-Do (羲圖), Neung-San (è±å±±), and Hoo-Wan (åŽæ™¥).
Hwang's great-grandfather was Hwang Yu-Sa (黃有師), his grandfather Hwang-Chae (黃寀), biological father Hwang In-Jo (黃ä»ç…§), father Hwang In-Young (éµåŽŸéŽå…µé¦¬åƒ‰ç¯€åˆ¶ä½¿ - 黃ä»ç…), maternal grandfather Min Baek-Bok (閔百ç¦), and brother Hwang Gi-Sung (黃基性).
In 1792, he passed his first governmental examination (壬å å¼å¹´è©¦ 生員), Class 2 Category 13.
In 1794, he passed his liberal arts examination (甲寅 åºè©¦ 丙科), Category 17.
Hwang was promoted to the government position Rank 6 (å…å“) and became Minister of the Interior (å曹æ£éƒž) without becoming Chung-Hwan position (淸宦è·).
In 1801, Hwang received the positions of MoonSaRang (å•äº‹éƒž), Gang-Dong Governor (江æ±ç¸£ç›£), Judge (æ£è¨€), Ji-Pyung (æŒå¹³), and JongBuSiJeong (宗簿寺æ£). In 1806, after not attending a government meeting to impeach the second vice-premier, Kim Dal-Soon (金é”æ·³), he was exiled to Yong-Chun (é¾å·) and then transferred to GoKumDo (å¤ä»Šå³¶), but in 1809 he was pardoned due to the birth of Ik-Jong (翼宗).
In 1820, he was appointed governor of Kyung-Sang State (慶尙é“都事) but soon thereafter he resigned.
He was talented in sentence construction and calligraphy (e.g., traditional (篆書), simplified (隷書), cursive (楷書), and hand-written (è‰æ›¸)).