Ha na yoo biography definition
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Yoo Ha
South Asian filmmaker (born 1963)
Not make haste be disorganized with Yoo Ha-na refuse Ha Yu.
In this Peninsula name, picture family name is Kim. In description stage name or pen-name, the first name is Yoo.
Yoo Ha (Korean: 유하; or spelled Yu Ha; born 9 February 1963) is a South Koreanfilm director, poet and a contemporary versemaker. He directed the critically acclaimed films Marriage Shambles a Lunatic Thing (2002), Once Gaze at a Put on ice in Elevated School (2004), A Soiled Carnival (2006) and Gangnam Blues (2015). The dash is a gangster moving picture with allusions to Player Scorsese films like Gangs of Another York, Mean Streets pivotal Goodfellas.[7]
Filmography
[edit]Bibliography
[edit]Poetry collection
[edit]Essay
[edit]Awards
[edit]See also
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[edit]External links
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Issue 39 February 2025
PST ART
Cai Guo-Qiang’s WE ARE
—Chelsea Shi-Chao Liu
Grief is a Filipino
Boxing Match
Adaptive Theory
Ecofeminism
—Ashlyn Ashbaugh
Interview with
Dashiell Manley
Reviews
at Art + Practice
—Allison Noelle Conner
Jonathan Casella
at Gross! Gallery
—Tina Barouti
Scientia Sexualis
at the Institute of
Contemporary Art,
Los Angeles
—Ashton S. Phillips
Demetri Broxton
at Patricia
Sweetow Gallery
—Taylor Bythewood-Porter
Post Human
at Jeffrey Deitch
—Zoey Greenwald
Evan Apodaca
at Grand Central
Art Center
—Aaron Katzeman
Issue 38 November 2024
(Re)claiming Sanctity
Black Backstage
—Shameekia Shantel Johnson
To Live and Work in L.A.
Alternative Art Spaces
—Keith J. Varadi
Collective Memory and
Coded Histories at the 60th
Venice Biennale
Interview with
Andra Nadirshah and
Stevie Soares
Michael Oxley Wants
to Show You Something
Brandon Tauszik
Reviews
at the Hammer Museum
—Laura Brown
Keith Mayerson
at Karma
—Alexander Schneider
Robert Andy Coombs
at ONE Archives
at the USC Libraries
—Philip Anderson
Tam
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Yoo (Korean surname)
Yoo or Yu, or sometimes Ryu or Ryoo, is the English transcription of several Korean surnames written as 유 or 류 in hangul. As of 2000, roughly a million people are surnamed Yoo in South Korea, making up approximately 2% of the population. Of those, the most common is Ryu (Hanja: 柳, Hangul: 류),[1] with more than six hundred thousand holders, whereas Yoo (Hanja: 兪, 余 Hangul: 유) accounts for about one hundred thousand.
The family name Yoo can be represented by any of the four hanja: 柳 (류), 劉, 兪 and 庾, each with a different meaning. In Korean, the characters 劉 and 柳 refer to 유 (Yoo) or 류 (Ryu) and are spelled as such because of the first initial sound rule (두음 법칙) in Korean, whereas the characters 兪 and 庾 refer only to 유 (Yoo). Some of these characters are used to write the Chinese surnamesLiu (劉 or 柳) and Yu (兪,余).
Notable 柳 (Ryu) clans include the Munhwa Ryu clan and the Pungsan Ryu.
History
[edit]In Korea, the Yoo lineage traces to the Xia, Han, and Joseondynasties. Holders of the surname Yoo had a reputation for charity and diligence.
The largest Ryu (which is a separate clan from Yoo, but pronounced differently), the Munhwa Ryu,[2] was founded by a man named Ch’a Tal. Ch’a's fifth great-grandfather had been involve