Sin Yunbok
| Sin Yunbok | |
| Korean name | |
|---|---|
| Hangul | 신윤복 |
| Hanja | 申潤福 |
| RR | Sin Yunbok |
| MR | Sin Yunbok |
| Art name | |
| Hangul | 혜원 |
| Hanja | 蕙園 |
| RR | Hyewon |
| MR | Hyewŏn |
| Courtesy name | |
| Hangul | 입부 |
| Hanja | 笠父 |
| RR | Ipbu |
| MR | Ippu |
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Sin Yunbok (Korean: 신윤복; 1758–1813), better known by his art name Hyewŏn, was a Korean painter of the Joseon period. Like his contemporaries Kim Hongdo and Kim Tŭksin, he is known for his realistic depictions of daily life in his time. His genre paintings are distinctly more erotic than Kim Hongdo's, a fact which contributed to his expulsion from the royal painting institute, Tohwasŏ. Painting was frequently a hereditary occupation in the Joseon period, and Sin's father and grandfather had both been court painters. Together with Kim Hongdo and the later painter Chang Sŭngŏp, Sin is remembered today as one of the "Three Wons" of Joseon-period painting, referring to the shared particles in their art names.