The Material Culture of Buddhist Propagation: Reinstating Buddhism in Early Colonial Seoul

: The restrictive measures against Buddhism under the Neo-Confucian Chos˘on dynasty resulted in the decline of Korean Buddhism at the start of the twentieth century. As the Chos˘on government started to make sweeping changes in the name of modernization, Korean Buddhist monks found an opportunity to revitalize their tradition through measures of reform. This paper examines one instance of attempts to bring Korean Buddhism back to the center of the country in the early twentieth century. The establishment of the Buddhist Central Propagation Space in 1920, examined thoroughly for the ﬁrst time in this study, shows a meaningful yet ultimately unsuccessful attempt at modernizing Korean Buddhism in the dynamics of the colonial Buddhism. Moving beyond the nationalist critique of its founder Yi Hoegwang, who has been heavily criticized for his pro-colonialist undertakings in later historiography, I reconsider the signiﬁcance of this propagation space in the history of Buddhist propagation and respatialization of Seoul during the early colonial period. My analysis of Three Gates in a Single Mind commissioned for this urban Buddhist temple in 1921 not only shows the diversity of modern Korean Buddhist paintings but also reveals a new role assigned to Buddhist icons in the changing context of Pure Land practice. I also discuss the seminal contribution of the court lady Ch’˘on Ilch’˘ong to the founding of the propagation space, thereby restoring the voice of one important laywoman in the modernization of Korean Buddhism. presented at the panel “Empathy Seen in Korean Visual Art in a Time of Crisis” at the annual conference of the Association of Asian Studies in March 2021. I am grateful to Todd A. Henry, who served on the panel, and participants at the conference for their thoughtful comments on my presentation. My special thanks goes to Choi Yeub (Ch’oe Y˘op) for granting me permission to use her photographs and sharing her deep knowledge of modern Korean Buddhist paintings and to Lee Jongsu for sharing his expertise on late Chos˘on Buddhism. I would like to also thank my two anonymous reviewers for their constructive feedback on an earlier version of this essay. Needless to say, any errors that may remain are my own.


Introduction
Unlike other major cities in East Asia, Hansȏng 漢城, the royal capital of Chosȏn 朝 鮮 (1392Chosȏn 朝 鮮 ( -1910, was devoid of Buddhist temples since the mid-seventeenth century due to the dominance of Neo-Confucianism and the ban prohibiting Buddhist monks from entering the capital. The lack of Buddhist edifices and activities created a unique urban landscape, causing nineteenth-century Western travelers to wonder if Koreans had any religion at all (Walraven 2000, pp. 178-79). The religious and architectural landscape of the capital underwent rapid, large-scale transformation as a result of Korea's opening of her ports to foreign powers in 1876. Such changes only accelerated amidst the capital's transformation first into the "Imperial City" (Hwangsȏng 皇城) of the Great Han Empire (Taehan Cheguk 大韓帝國) and then into the colonial city Kyȏngsȏng 京城 during the Japanese occupation (Kim 2009;Yȏm 2016). As Todd A. Henry has shown, many social groups participated or intervened in the modern transformation of the city during this particularly turbulent period of Korean history (Henry 2007(Henry , 2014. The Korean Buddhist community was one of the forces that attempted to "respatialize" the capital with their agenda to bring Buddhism back to the center of the state and society. With the lifting of the ban in 1895, the Buddhist community found new opportunities to pursue meaningful reform and keep up with profound changes in Korean society and politics. 1 Reinscribing Buddhism in Seoul was one of the primary goals of Korean Buddhist leaders. This goal was embodied in their strenuous efforts to establish a Korean Buddhist temple, one that would govern all temples in Korea, in central Seoul.
was embodied in their strenuous efforts to establish a Korean Buddhist temple, one that would govern all temples in Korea, in central Seoul.
Opportunities came with challenges, however. Korean Buddhism had to win over the lay public from Christianity, Japanese Buddhism, and indigenous new religions such as Ch'ŏndogyo 天道敎 (The Religion of the Heavenly Way), while compromising first with the Korean Chosŏn government and later the Japanese colonial government. 2 By 1911, a total of 167 Japanese Buddhist temples, branch temples (J. betsuin 別院), and propagation centers had been established on the Korean peninsula (Kim 1994, p. 20). By 1933, that number had grown to more than 350, with 1,900,000 lay believers (Kim 1933, pp. 14-15). 3 Several attempts were made to establish the headquarters of Korean Buddhism within the city but failed due to the colonial government's regulations. Instead, these efforts led to the founding of propagation halls (p'ogyodang 布敎堂) in Seoul and other major cities. As Hwansoo Ilmee Kim and Mark A. Nathan have recently shown, the urban Buddhist temples were widely considered as advance bases for the propagation (p'ogyo 布敎) of Buddhist ideas and practices in the rapidly modernizing Korean society (H. Kim 2018, pp. 231-75;Nathan 2018, pp. 54-80). Along with Christian churches, Japanese Buddhist temples, and Shintō shrines, the branch centers of Korean Buddhist temples contributed to the hybrid character of the landscape of colonial Seoul by the late 1910s and early 1920s ( Figure 1). Propagation halls were arenas for various forms of Buddhist propagation, ranging from regular dharma talks and public lectures to Sunday schools and ritual ceremonies such as weddings. Such halls were duly equipped with Buddhist icons, ritual tools, and other objects necessary for worship. In other words, the establishment of propagation halls brought the material culture of Buddhism back to cities.  Sōtokufu (1921). Courtesy of Seoul Museum of History.
This article, through a case study of the Buddhist Central Propagation Space (Pulgyo Chungang P'ogyoso 佛敎中央布敎所) that stood in the former precinct of Tŏksugung 德 壽宮 in the 1920s but shortly faded into the mists of history, sheds new light on Korean Buddhism's efforts to secure a place in the state and society. The transformation of royal palaces into public spaces such as museums and public parks had taken place under the Japanese colonial authorities since the first decade of the twentieth century. 4 However, the transformation of palace buildings into Buddhist edifices was still shocking to Seoul's residents in the early 1920s and, for this very reason, deserves sustained analysis. Thus, I will first examine the founding of the propagation space in the larger context of Korean Buddhist leaders' collective efforts-which were often marred by political discord-to reclaim Buddhism's place in the center of the country and to gain institutional governmentality. Then, I proceed to analyze the painting known to modern scholars as Three Gates in a Single This article, through a case study of the Buddhist Central Propagation Space (Pulgyo Chungang P'ogyoso 佛敎中央布敎所) that stood in the former precinct of Tȏksugung 德 壽宮 in the 1920s but shortly faded into the mists of history, sheds new light on Korean Buddhism's efforts to secure a place in the state and society. The transformation of royal palaces into public spaces such as museums and public parks had taken place under the Japanese colonial authorities since the first decade of the twentieth century. 4 However, the transformation of palace buildings into Buddhist edifices was still shocking to Seoul's residents in the early 1920s and, for this very reason, deserves sustained analysis. Thus, I will first examine the founding of the propagation space in the larger context of Korean Buddhist leaders' collective efforts-which were often marred by political discord-to reclaim Buddhism's place in the center of the country and to gain institutional governmentality. Then, I proceed to analyze the painting known to modern scholars as Three Gates in a Single Mind (Ilsim samgwanmun 一心三關門). Originally conceived as a triptych, the painting preserves the central and left frames only. Despite its fragmentary state, the painting is intriguing for its complex iconography that defies easy classification within the Religions 2021, 12, 352 3 of 31 pre-developed canon of late Chosȏn Buddhist paintings. Currently housed in Simusa 尋 牛寺 in Kȏch'ang, South Kyȏngsang Province, the painting was examined in Choi Yeub's pioneering study on the role of Buddhist paintings and imagery in propagation during the early modern period (Ch'oe 2014a). Its unique iconography has also been subject to meticulous examinations in Kang Soyȏn's studies (Kang 2010(Kang , 2015. In the pages that follow, I reconsider the meaning of Three Gates in a Single Mind in the spatial context of this urban propagation space by raising some important questions. How did the painter create such a hybrid of iconography? Who were the intended viewers-cum-worshippers? Ultimately, what role did icons play in the effort to modernize Korean Buddhism? Answering these questions reveals hitherto unexamined aspects of the propagation space as lived religious space. In so doing, I bring the material culture of propagation halls to the fore while shedding new light on the religious aspirations of various social groups-ranging from Buddhist leaders to painters and lay believers-that have long remained obscure in the literature.

Reinscribing Korean Buddhism in Seoul: The Founding of a Propagation Space
At the start of the twentieth century, the Korean Buddhist community attempted to modernize Korean Buddhism through a variety of reformist measures. These reformminded Buddhists aspired to establish a powerful institutional structure, whether it be a central administrative office or a great head temple (H. Kim 2018, p. 187). The first propagation hall emerged amidst Korean Buddhism's efforts to form a modern and semiautonomous institution. In 1899, the royal court of Chosȏn established a small temple, later called Wȏnhȗngsa 元興寺, directly outside the Great East Gate of Seoul. In 1902, the Chosȏn government set up an administrative office there called the Bureau of Temple Administration (Sasa Kwalli Sȏ 寺社管理署) and promulgated the Temple Ordinance to regulate Korean Buddhism, designating Wȏnhȗngsa as the great head temple of the sixteen head temples in the provinces (Kwȏn 1917, p. 247). However, the temple, the office, and the system were short-lived as Japan seized control over Korea in the aftermath of the Russo-Japanese War (1904)(1905). The headquarters of Korean Buddhist temples fell into the hands of Japanese Jōdōshū 淨土宗 briefly in 1906 but was returned to Korean Buddhist monastics in early 1908. Korean Buddhist leaders established Wȏnjong 圓宗, the first representative body of Korean Buddhism, and set up an administrative office at Wȏnhȗngsa (Yi 1918, vol. 2, p. 937). Yi Hoegwang 李晦光 (1862-1933, a monk who became heavily criticized by his contemporaries and later historians for his pro-colonialist undertakings, was designated as head priest of the sect (Figure 2). 5 A significant account of his early life is included in Pȏmhae Kagan's 梵海覺岸 (1820Kagan's 梵海覺岸 ( -1896 Tongsa yȏlchȏn 東師列傳 (Biographies of Eastern Masters), completed in 1894. Ordained under the guidance of Poun Kȗngyȏp 寶 雲亘葉 at Sinhȗngsa 新興寺 in 1881, Yi Hoegwang earned a reputation as a great scholarly teacher (taegangbaek 大講伯) with whom young monks from all corners of the kingdom sought to study. 6 Having traveled and practiced Sȏn meditation at various temples, he came to Seoul and soon found supporters among influential Buddhist monks who were well connected to the royal court and the Japanese Jōdōshū. Establishing Korean Buddhism's future head temple within the four gates of Seoul was tremendously significant for Korean Buddhist monks. Located outside the wall, which had long separated Buddhist monks from the monarch and upper echelon, Wŏnhŭngsa was deemed inappropriate by Korean Buddhist leaders to serve as the great head temple. For them, the physical location seemed to signify a marginalized role for Korean Buddhism in society (Kim 2012, pp. 128-29). Such aspirations must have felt urgent, given that Christian and Japanese religious edifices had already been established within the walls of Seoul and other major cities. For instance, the first American Methodist church, constructed from 1895 to 1897, stood at Chŏngdong 貞洞, where the main palace Tŏksugung was located and foreign legations were concentrated ( Figure 3). Typically, Japanese Buddhist missionaries established facilities for propagation in downtown areas near Japanese concessions in major treaty ports such as Pusan 釜 山 , Inch'ŏn 仁 川 , Mokp'o 木浦, and Kunsan 群山 (Kim et al. 2012, p. 59). For example, in 1890 the Ōtani branch of the Jōdō Shinshū 淨土眞宗 established a propagation space-affiliated with the Higashi Honganji 東本願寺 in Kyoto, Japan-right next to the Japanese legation on the northern slope of Seoul's Mount Nam 南山. It was promoted to a branch center in 1895. Construction of its main hall was completed in May 1906 in the style of traditional Japanese temple architecture (Kim 1994, pp. 139-40) (Figure 4). 7 The scenery of the area was further transformed as the Great Shrine of Mount Nam (Nanzan Daijingu 南山大神宮), renamed Keijō Jinja 京城神社 in 1916, was established in 1898.
Construction of these religious edifices introduced new types of architectural vocabulary hitherto unknown in Korea, transforming the skyline of Seoul and other major cities across the peninsula. Although Japanese Buddhist temples in Seoul were demolished in the post-colonial period, a couple of examples still remain in the southern parts of the peninsula. Like any ordinary Buddhist temples in Japan, they generally consisted of a main hall (J. hondō 本堂), where images of buddhas and bodhisattvas were enshrined, and a kitchen-residence (J. kuri 庫裡), where the abbot lived with his family. The main halls of Japanese Buddhist temples, as in the case of the Seoul branch of Higashi Honganji, was recognizable even from a distance due to its distinctive hip-and-gable roof construction (J. irimoya-zukuri 入母屋造). Roofed staircases were mostly installed at the center of such buildings' façades (Kim et al. 2012, pp. 62-71). Establishing Korean Buddhism's future head temple within the four gates of Seoul was tremendously significant for Korean Buddhist monks. Located outside the wall, which had long separated Buddhist monks from the monarch and upper echelon, Wȏnhȗngsa was deemed inappropriate by Korean Buddhist leaders to serve as the great head temple. For them, the physical location seemed to signify a marginalized role for Korean Buddhism in society (Kim 2012, pp. 128-29). Such aspirations must have felt urgent, given that Christian and Japanese religious edifices had already been established within the walls of Seoul and other major cities. For instance, the first American Methodist church, constructed from 1895 to 1897, stood at Chȏngdong 貞洞, where the main palace Tȏksugung was located and foreign legations were concentrated ( Figure 3). Typically, Japanese Buddhist missionaries established facilities for propagation in downtown areas near Japanese concessions in major treaty ports such as Pusan 釜山, Inch'ȏn 仁川, Mokp'o 木浦, and Kunsan 群山 (Kim et al. 2012, p. 59). For example, in 1890 theŌtani branch of the Jōdō Shinshū 淨土眞宗 established a propagation space-affiliated with the Higashi Honganji 東本願寺 in Kyoto, Japan-right next to the Japanese legation on the northern slope of Seoul's Mount Nam 南 山. It was promoted to a branch center in 1895. Construction of its main hall was completed in May 1906 in the style of traditional Japanese temple architecture (Kim 1994, pp. 139-40) (Figure 4). 7 The scenery of the area was further transformed as the Great Shrine of Mount Nam (Nanzan Daijingu 南山大神宮), renamed Keijō Jinja 京城神社 in 1916, was established in 1898.
Construction of these religious edifices introduced new types of architectural vocabulary hitherto unknown in Korea, transforming the skyline of Seoul and other major cities across the peninsula. Although Japanese Buddhist temples in Seoul were demolished in the post-colonial period, a couple of examples still remain in the southern parts of the peninsula. Like any ordinary Buddhist temples in Japan, they generally consisted of a main hall (J. hondō 本堂), where images of buddhas and bodhisattvas were enshrined, and a kitchen-residence (J. kuri 庫裡), where the abbot lived with his family. The main halls of Japanese Buddhist temples, as in the case of the Seoul branch of Higashi Honganji, was recognizable even from a distance due to its distinctive hip-and-gable roof construction (J. irimoya-zukuri 入母屋造). Roofed staircases were mostly installed at the center of such buildings' façades (Kim et al. 2012, pp. 62-71).  In late 1910, the leadership of Wŏnjong was able to build a new temple, Kakhwangsa 覺皇寺, inside the four gates of Seoul, and declared it to be the administrative center of Korean Buddhism. Given that Yi Hoegwang highly prized the propagation method of Japanese Buddhism, it is not surprising that he hired a Sōtōshū 曹洞宗 missionary to serve as an architectural consultant rather than following the traditional Korean architectural style. The temple was modeled after a branch temple of the Sōtōshū in central Seoul, despite fierce opposition from many Korean Buddhist monks. 8 Shortly after, Yi Hoegwang and his colleagues went a step further in an effort to press authorities to recognize Wŏnjong. In October 1910, he attempted to merge the Wŏnjong with the Sōtōshū, infuriating many Korean Buddhist monks. 9 For the rest of the Korean Buddhist community, it meant that the Sōtōshū, merely one of many sects of Japanese Buddhism, would annex the Wŏnjong, which represented Korean Buddhism in its entirety. Led by the well-known reformist monk Han Yong'un 韓龍雲 (1879-1944, this group of Korean Buddhist monks soon established a counter institution under the name of Imjejong 臨濟宗, setting up their own administrative office in Seoul in May 1912 (Kim 1995). The colonial government had disestablished both the Wŏnjong and Imjejong in 1911, ordering Korean Buddhists to adopt the institutional name Joint School of Sŏn and Kyo (Sŏn Kyo Yangjong 禪敎兩宗). In June of 1911, the colonial government promulgated the Temple Ordinance (sach'allyŏng 寺刹令) in order to supervise the Korean Buddhist community directly under its administration (T. Han 2006, pp. 97-121). Under this legal framework, the founding of Korean Buddhist temples was denied but that of Buddhist propagation halls was permitted.  In late 1910, the leadership of Wŏnjong was able to build a new temple, Kakhwangsa 覺皇寺, inside the four gates of Seoul, and declared it to be the administrative center of Korean Buddhism. Given that Yi Hoegwang highly prized the propagation method of Japanese Buddhism, it is not surprising that he hired a Sōtōshū 曹洞宗 missionary to serve as an architectural consultant rather than following the traditional Korean architectural style. The temple was modeled after a branch temple of the Sōtōshū in central Seoul, despite fierce opposition from many Korean Buddhist monks. 8 Shortly after, Yi Hoegwang and his colleagues went a step further in an effort to press authorities to recognize Wŏnjong. In October 1910, he attempted to merge the Wŏnjong with the Sōtōshū, infuriating many Korean Buddhist monks. 9 For the rest of the Korean Buddhist community, it meant that the Sōtōshū, merely one of many sects of Japanese Buddhism, would annex the Wŏnjong, which represented Korean Buddhism in its entirety. Led by the well-known reformist monk Han Yong'un 韓龍雲 (1879-1944, this group of Korean Buddhist monks soon established a counter institution under the name of Imjejong 臨濟宗, setting up their own administrative office in Seoul in May 1912 (Kim 1995). The colonial government had disestablished both the Wŏnjong and Imjejong in 1911, ordering Korean Buddhists to adopt the institutional name Joint School of Sŏn and Kyo (Sŏn Kyo Yangjong 禪敎兩宗). In June of 1911, the colonial government promulgated the Temple Ordinance (sach'allyŏng 寺刹令) in order to supervise the Korean Buddhist community directly under its administration (T. Han 2006, pp. 97-121). Under this legal framework, the founding of Korean Buddhist temples was denied but that of Buddhist propagation halls was permitted. In late 1910, the leadership of Wȏnjong was able to build a new temple, Kakhwangsa 覺皇寺, inside the four gates of Seoul, and declared it to be the administrative center of Korean Buddhism. Given that Yi Hoegwang highly prized the propagation method of Japanese Buddhism, it is not surprising that he hired a Sōtōshū 曹洞宗 missionary to serve as an architectural consultant rather than following the traditional Korean architectural style. The temple was modeled after a branch temple of the Sōtōshū in central Seoul, despite fierce opposition from many Korean Buddhist monks. 8 Shortly after, Yi Hoegwang and his colleagues went a step further in an effort to press authorities to recognize Wȏnjong. In October 1910, he attempted to merge the Wȏnjong with the Sōtōshū, infuriating many Korean Buddhist monks. 9 For the rest of the Korean Buddhist community, it meant that the Sōtōshū, merely one of many sects of Japanese Buddhism, would annex the Wȏnjong, which represented Korean Buddhism in its entirety. Led by the well-known reformist monk Han Yong'un 韓龍雲 (1879-1944, this group of Korean Buddhist monks soon established a counter institution under the name of Imjejong 臨濟宗, setting up their own administrative office in Seoul in May 1912 (Kim 1995 pp. 97-121). Under this legal framework, the founding of Korean Buddhist temples was denied but that of Buddhist propagation halls was permitted. Kakhwangsa, demoted to a propagation hall of Wȏnhȗngsa under the 1911 Temple Ordinance, became the first of its kind in central Seoul (Kim 2003).
From the 1910s, prominent Buddhist temples began to establish branches as propagation halls in cities and towns nationwide to disseminate the Korean Buddhist teachings and practices among the masses. By 1913, thirteen propagation halls had been established in Seoul by head temples across the country (H. Kim 2018, p. 236). The major propagation halls played a crucial role in monastic affairs and social movements as well, whereas the more modest ones still helped to give Korean Buddhism a foothold in modern society. The Buddhist Central Propagation Space appears to have been one of the most famous, if not successful, propagation halls. In retrospect, this was a byproduct of Yi Hoegwang's second alliance attempt in 1920. Yi Hoegwang attempted to merge Korean Buddhism with the Myōshinji 妙心寺 branch of the Japanese Rinzaishū 臨濟宗 in collaboration with the Rinzaishū missionary Gotō Tangan 後藤瑞岩 and the abbots of eight head temples in the South and North Kyȏngsang provinces. One of his key plans was to set up a great head temple in central Seoul. With the support of the eight head temples, Yi Hoegwang purchased a property in central Seoul as a possible site for the new main head temple (S. Yi 2004b, p. 194). As the Japanese newspaper Chūgai nippō 中外日報 reported on his preparations for the alliance in June 1920, Yi Hoegwang soon drew harsh condemnation for attempting to sell out Korean Buddhism. 10 In the end, he had to abort the deal since the colonial government found his plan to be in violation of the 1911 Temple Ordinance. Consequently, a propagation hall was set up on the purchased property in December 1920 instead of a great head temple. It was affiliated with Haeinsa 海印寺, a prominent temple in South Kyȏngsang Province with which Yi Hoegwang had been affiliated from around 1908 and where he served as abbot four times from December 1911 to 1924.
The founding and administration of the Buddhist Central Propagation Space drew intense public attention in the early 1920s for several reasons. At the beginning, newspapers focused on its location on the site of Sȏnwȏnjȏn 璿源殿, a part of Tȏksugung that had been extensively rebuilt since 1896 by Kojong 高宗 (1852-1919)-who ruled Korea as a Chosȏn king from 1864 to 1897 and as first emperor of the Great Han Empire from 1897 until his forced abdication in 1907 ( Figure 5). 11 Tȏksugung, once the political arena where Kojong declared the establishment of the empire, still held great significance for Koreans as the residence of the abdicated emperor until his death in January 1919. In the colonial period, the area encompassing the Sȏnwȏnjȏn and other buildings was popularly known as the palace precinct within the Yȏngsȏngmun (Yȏngsȏngmun taegwȏl 永成門大闕) ( Figure 6). The Sȏnwȏnjȏn, built in 1901 on the former sites of government drill grounds and private houses, held portraits of successive rulers of the Chosȏn dynasty, whereas other buildings in the precinct were used for royal funerary rites and ancestor worship (An 2009, pp. 227-31). 12 As such, they collectively symbolized the legitimacy of the Great Han Empire and were greatly revered by Seoul's residents. Until Kojong's death in January 1919, the colonial government faced public opposition whenever it announced a new plan to develop the district (Y. Yi 2005a, p. 66).  By January 1920, the Office of Prince Yi Household (Yiwangjik; J. Riōshoku 李王職), which handled affairs regarding Korea's former royal house, appears to have made secret contracts to sell the vast expanse of 15,000 p'yŏng within the Yŏngsŏngmun to Japanese entrepreneurs under the pretense of efficient urban development, although it denied such deals in a newspaper interview. 13 In fact, the dismantlement of the palace had already begun as late as the fall of 1919. 14 Although the office repeatedly announced that this issue had not been discussed in February and March of 1920, 15 this explanation turned out to be false as evidenced by the demolition of palatial buildings within the Yŏngsŏngmun  By January 1920, the Office of Prince Yi Household (Yiwangjik; J. Riōshoku 李王職), which handled affairs regarding Korea's former royal house, appears to have made secret contracts to sell the vast expanse of 15,000 p'yŏng within the Yŏngsŏngmun to Japanese entrepreneurs under the pretense of efficient urban development, although it denied such deals in a newspaper interview. 13 In fact, the dismantlement of the palace had already begun as late as the fall of 1919. 14 Although the office repeatedly announced that this issue had not been discussed in February and March of 1920, 15 this explanation turned out to be false as evidenced by the demolition of palatial buildings within the Yŏngsŏngmun By January 1920, the Office of Prince Yi Household (Yiwangjik; J. Riōshoku 李王 職), which handled affairs regarding Korea's former royal house, appears to have made secret contracts to sell the vast expanse of 15,000 p'yȏng within the Yȏngsȏngmun to Japanese entrepreneurs under the pretense of efficient urban development, although it denied such deals in a newspaper interview. 13 In fact, the dismantlement of the palace had already begun as late as the fall of 1919. 14 Although the office repeatedly announced that this issue had not been discussed in February and March of 1920, 15 this explanation turned out to be false as evidenced by the demolition of palatial buildings within the Yȏngsȏngmun throughout the spring of that year (Y. Yi 2005b, pp. 159-60). 16 As the royal portraits were relocated to Ch'angdȏkkung 昌德宮 in February 1920, major buildings within the Yȏngsȏngmun were dismantled and some of their materials were transferred to Ch'angdȏkgung to be used in the construction of the Sinsȏnwȏnjȏn 新璿源殿 for these portraits (K. Yi 2005). 17 By May and June of 1920, the demolition was almost completed, causing much grief and anger among Koreans. 18 A map of Seoul drafted in 1921 suggests that some ancillary buildings, which escaped demolition, were converted to facilities of the propagation space, while its main hall was constructed on the former site of Sȏnwȏnjȏn (Munhwajaechȏng 2014b, pp. 48, 59;Chang and Chȏn 2013, pp. 200-1;Chang 2014, pp. 184-85).
Yi Hoegwang, who secured 7800 p'yȏng of land in the spring of 1920, began preparations to open the "headquarters of propagation" (p'ogyo ponpu 布敎本部) in Seoul, as the media dubbed it. 19 Although the spatial arrangement of the establishment is not entirely clear due to lack of evidence, it had at least a main hall (Sambojȏn 三寶殿), a teaching hall (Sȏlpȏpchȏn 說法殿), and a meditation room (Sȏnsil 禪室) together with a five-storied stone pagoda and stone lantern. 20 On 25 December 1920, the propagation space held a grandiose ceremony for the installation of a gilt Buddha statue that had been transported from its mother temple, Haeinsa, by train ( Figure 7). 21 The Buddha statue arrived at the Great South Gate Station of Seoul on the morning of the ceremony. Monks and lay believers, approximately one hundred in number, paid respects to the Buddha statue and escorted it to the newly built propagation space. The transportation of the statue from the station to the urban temple presented a spectacle to residents of Seoul. At the head of the procession were some ten flagbearers, followed by musicians playing horns and drums. Behind them was the statue, on a palanquin (yȏn 輦), followed by some twenty high-ranking monks, including Yi Hoegwang, and fifty lay believers. 22 The installation ceremony was held at the Sambojȏn of the propagation space in the presence of honored guests, including eminent lay Buddhists such as Yi Nȗnghwa 李能和 (1869-1943 and colonial government officials. After the ceremony, monks and people at the temple threw "lucky cakes" (poktt'ȏk ᄇ ᅩ ᆨᄄ ᅥ ᆨ) to a crowd of a thousand people gathered in the temple precinct, as per the Japanese custom. 23 Religions 2021, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 8 of 32 throughout the spring of that year (Y. Yi 2005b, pp. 159-60). 16 As the royal portraits were relocated to Ch'angdŏkkung 昌 德 宮 in February 1920, major buildings within the Yŏngsŏngmun were dismantled and some of their materials were transferred to Ch'angdŏkgung to be used in the construction of the Sinsŏnwŏnjŏn 新璿源殿 for these portraits (K. Yi 2005). 17 By May and June of 1920, the demolition was almost completed, causing much grief and anger among Koreans. 18 A map of Seoul drafted in 1921 suggests that some ancillary buildings, which escaped demolition, were converted to facilities of the propagation space, while its main hall was constructed on the former site of Sŏnwŏnjŏn (Munhwajaechŏng 2014b, pp. 48, 59;Chang and Chŏn 2013, pp. 200-1;Chang 2014, pp. 184-85). Yi Hoegwang, who secured 7800 p'yŏng of land in the spring of 1920, began preparations to open the "headquarters of propagation" (p'ogyo ponpu 布敎本部) in Seoul, as the media dubbed it. 19 Although the spatial arrangement of the establishment is not entirely clear due to lack of evidence, it had at least a main hall (Sambojŏn 三寶殿), a teaching hall (Sŏlpŏpchŏn 說法殿), and a meditation room (Sŏnsil 禪室) together with a five-storied stone pagoda and stone lantern. 20 On 25 December 1920, the propagation space held a grandiose ceremony for the installation of a gilt Buddha statue that had been transported from its mother temple, Haeinsa, by train ( Figure 7). 21 The Buddha statue arrived at the Great South Gate Station of Seoul on the morning of the ceremony. Monks and lay believers, approximately one hundred in number, paid respects to the Buddha statue and escorted it to the newly built propagation space. The transportation of the statue from the station to the urban temple presented a spectacle to residents of Seoul. At the head of the procession were some ten flagbearers, followed by musicians playing horns and drums. Behind them was the statue, on a palanquin (yŏn 輦), followed by some twenty high-ranking monks, including Yi Hoegwang, and fifty lay believers. 22 The installation ceremony was held at the Sambojŏn of the propagation space in the presence of honored guests, including eminent lay Buddhists such as Yi Nŭnghwa 李能和 (1869-1943 and colonial government officials. After the ceremony, monks and people at the temple threw "lucky cakes" (poktt'ŏk 복떡) to a crowd of a thousand people gathered in the temple precinct, as per the Japanese custom. 23

Creating a Visual Emblem of Propagation: The Painting and Its Iconography
Following the successful installation ceremony, the propagation space held an elaborate celebration for the birth of BuddhaŚākyamuni in May 1921. The Buddha's Birthday, set for the eighth day of the fourth lunar month, was traditionally the climax of the Bud- dhist ceremonial year in Korea (Buswell 1993, p. 43). From the 1910s onward, the holiday was observed with elaborate events not only in major cities but also in remote mountain temples, thanks to new roads and mass transportation (H. Kim 2018, pp. 87-89). Several days before the Buddha's birthday, temples big and small typically hung banner paintings of monumental size (kwaebul 掛佛) and lit round paper lanterns with beautiful tails (subak dȗng ᄉ ᅮᄇ ᅡ ᆨᄃ ᅳ ᆼ). Urban propagation halls also celebrated the long-awaited holiday with dharma talks and public lectures. 24 For example, in 1920 the Kakhwang Propagation Hall held a celebratory lecture in the daytime and presented a play calledŚākyamunis Triumph over Māra under the Bodhi Tree (Suha hangma sang 樹下降魔相) at night, attracting large numbers of lay people. 25 Likewise, on May 13th and 15th of the following year, the Buddhist Central Propagation Space held public lectures and played a movie with Buddhist contents. 26 The dedication of Three Gates in a Single Mind seems to have been a highlight of celebrations that the propagation space had planned.
Originally composed of three vertically elongated frames, the painting preserves the center and left frames intact as well as the ink inscriptions along its upper and left borders ( Figure 8). The inscriptions, which can be classified into three groups, show a manner of writing a "painting record" (hwagi 畵記) quite different from the convention of late Chosȏn Buddhist paintings. First of all, the two inscriptions along the upper border identify the theme of each frame unfolding downwardly. The central frame portrays the "Nine grades of rebirth in the Land of Ultimate Bliss and the dragon boat of wisdom" (Kȗngnak kup'um panya yongsȏn 極樂九品般若龍船), a theme that became codified and popular in the late nineteenth century, whereas the left frame illustrates the "Rebirth in all the heavenly palaces as retribution for good deeds" (Chech'ȏn kungjȏn susȏn sangsaeng 諸 天宮殿修善上生). The theme of the right frame seems to have been identified in the same way although its composition is almost impossible to deduce since it is missing.
Next, the left border of the painting bears two groups of ink inscriptions, one identifying the overarching theme of the painting and another revealing crucial information about its production. The first group, in large characters, reads: "Three gates in a single mind. Cultivating the causes [of enlightenment] in yearning for retributions" (Ilsim samgwanmun. Mogwa suin. 一心三關門 慕果修因). 27 The three gates, corresponding to the three frames that make up the painting, refer to entrances to the Land of Ultimate Bliss, or the Western Paradise of Amitābha Buddha, the most desired postmortem destination throughout the late Chosȏn and modern eras. The "causes" in the following line refer to good deeds, whereas "retribution" corresponds to rebirths in the Western Paradise. The opening of the inscription, "Three gates in a single mind," has become synonymous with the painting in modern scholarship.
The last inscription, written in small characters in the lower left of the border, reads: Began on the first day of the third lunar month in the sinyu year, the 2948th year since the birth ofŚākyamuni, the honored one. Reported its completion on the day of bathing the Buddha. The painting was, according to the inscription above, enshrined in the Sŏlpŏpchŏn of the Buddhist Central Propagation Space on the day of bathing the Buddha (Kwanbul il 灌佛日) in 1921. The day, honoring the Buddha's birthday, corresponds to 15 May 1921 in the Gregorian calendar. The short inscription is illuminating in many respects for the organizational change that it witnessed. The typical votive inscription of a late Chosŏn Buddhist painting, written in cartouches along the lower border, begins with the part recording the date of production, the theme(s) and number of painting(s) being dedicated, and the location. The remaining portion of the inscription usually consists of three parts. The first part, called yŏnhwa chil 緣化秩, records those who participated in and supported the production of painting from the post of verifier (chŭngmyŏng 證明) to the reciter of spells (songju 誦呪), director of affairs (chijŏn 持殿), painters (kŭmŏ 金魚), and fundraiser (hwaju 化主). 28 This is followed by a portion called sanjung chil 山中秩, which lists resident monks of the temple where the painting will be enshrined. The last part, called siju chil 施主秩, The painting was, according to the inscription above, enshrined in the Sȏlpȏpchȏn of the Buddhist Central Propagation Space on the day of bathing the Buddha (Kwanbul il 灌佛日) in 1921. The day, honoring the Buddha's birthday, corresponds to 15 May 1921 in the Gregorian calendar. The short inscription is illuminating in many respects for the organizational change that it witnessed. The typical votive inscription of a late Chosȏn Buddhist painting, written in cartouches along the lower border, begins with the part recording the date of production, the theme(s) and number of painting(s) being dedicated, and the location. The remaining portion of the inscription usually consists of three parts. The first part, called yȏnhwa chil 緣化秩, records those who participated in and supported the production of painting from the post of verifier (chȗngmyȏng 證明) to the reciter of spells (songju 誦呪), director of affairs (chijȏn 持殿), painters (kȗmȏ 金魚), and fundraiser (hwaju 化主). 28 This is followed by a portion called sanjung chil 山中秩, which lists resident monks of the temple where the painting will be enshrined. The last part, called siju chil 施主秩, records the names of patrons who financially supported the production. Sometimes, it is further followed by dedicatory wishes. Herein, traditional monastic duties are largely replaced by modern terms recalling secular corporate ones. Although we cannot be certain, the right border may have borne another piece of inscription listing the names of such patrons.
The inscription acknowledges Yi Hoegwang as the supervisor (kamdok 監督), seemingly corresponding to the post of togam 都監, which handles a temple's religious affairs as well as the logistics of construction and image production. It credits Kosan Ch 'ukyȏn 古山竺衍 (ca. 1850-1930) as the monk painter responsible for the overall composition (ch'ulch'o 出草). During the late Chosȏn period, monk painters were essentially the sole suppliers of Buddhist paintings and statues for temples. Traditionally, young novices would train in temples under master monk painters. Once they had become accomplished, they would begin to train their own apprentices in the same way. The disciples usually inherited ink drawings (ch'o 草 or ch'obon 草本) of altar paintings and referred to them from time to time, even after becoming head painters. Consequently, the conservative nature of apprenticeship promoted the practice of copying from artistic models. The creation of plans for highly complex devotional images required deep knowledge of Buddhist iconography, skilled brushwork, and excellence in composition. Only accomplished monk painters, or those skilled in pictorial composition, designed new plans for devotional images (Chang and Wilson 2003, pp. 58-59).
Ch'ukyȏn was inarguably the only monk painter qualified for the daunting task of an original composition for the Sȏlpȏpchȏn. Surnamed Mun 文, he was active as a painter from the mid-1870s to 1930. Already accomplished as a head painter, Ch'ukyȏn returned to lay life around 1894. 29 Based at Yujȏmsa 楡岾寺 in the Diamond Mountains as a lay Buddhist practitioner (kȏsa 居士), he seems to have made his living by producing paintings of secular subjects from around 1895to 1910(Ch'oe 2005. He then rejoined the sam . gha as a married Buddhist monk at the age of sixty around 1915. During the early colonial period, Ch'ukyȏn earned a reputation as a leading master of Buddhist paintings, with coverage in newspapers and early publications on Korean art. 30 His fame increased in his later years to the extent that he was called "the head and model painter of the entire Korea" (chȏn Sȏn'gye subȏm hwasa 全鮮界首範畵師) (Hoemyȏng 1991, p. 363). His works dating after the 1910s, many of which were commissions for major temples, stand out for their novel iconography, dramatic compositions, and non-traditional painting techniques. It is notable that Ch'ukyȏn and Yi Hoegwang, serving as painter and verifier, respectively, collaborated on numerous projects involving the repair and production of Buddhist icons. From the 1900s to 1920s, they collaborated on several Buddhist paintings commissioned by major temples in North Kyȏngsang Province. For example, they participated together in the production of Buddhist paintings for Tonghwasa 桐華寺 in 1905, Sȏnsȏksa 禪石 寺 in 1918, and Taedunsa 大芚寺 in 1920 Given that Yi Hoegwang supervised this painting's production, he may have commissioned Ch'ukyȏn to create a novel composition embodying his vision of propagation that would appeal to temple-goers of the time.
Judging from surviving sections of the inscriptions and painting, the piece as a whole seems to illustrate the theme of one mind generating three different effects in accordance with the three causes while also preaching that one must practice good deeds to earn rebirth in the Western Paradise. As such, the painting embodies a moral, encouraging believers to cultivate their mind and accumulate good karma for good retribution (Ch'oe 2014a, pp. 207-8). The tripartite composition would have been derived from the white circle against the bright green background at the bottom of the central frame. 32 As mentioned earlier, the central frame portrays the two sub-themes-namely, the nine grades of rebirth and the salvific dragon boat-in a vertically elongated frame. On the one hand, the scriptural basis of the former theme is found in the Contemplation Sūtra (Kwan Muryangsu kyȏng 觀無量壽 經), which teaches sixteen kinds of meditation (sibyuk kwan 十六觀) as a means for attaining rebirth in the Western Paradise. The sixteen kinds of meditation, a popular iconographic theme of Buddhist paintings during the Koryȏ 高麗 (908-1392), gradually gave way to the theme of the nine grades of rebirth, corresponding to the fourteenth, fifteenth, and sixteenth meditations in the Contemplation Sūtra. The motif of nine grades of rebirth, although it had already appeared in the late Koryȏ, developed into diverse forms and enjoyed wide popularity starting in the eighteenth century due to its strong visual effect of presenting the rebirth in lotus ponds (Chȏng 2007, p. 151). 33 On the other hand, the dragon boat of wisdom refers to an iconographic motif in which Amitābha Buddha receives deceased souls and ferries them to his Western Paradise. The dragon, a protector of Buddhist law, is entrusted with the task of ferrying souls to the other shore. The motif, which dates back to the late thirteenth century, appears to have received heightened interest in the late nineteenth century to the extent of becoming an independent subject for altar paintings and murals in worship halls (C. Kim 2014a).
The rise of the two motifs was linked to the popularity of Pure Land cultic practices, particularly the verbal chanting of the name of Amitābha Buddha (yȏmbul 念佛), to attain rebirth in the Western Paradise among all social strata at the time (Lee 2019, p. 38). Shortcut to Rebirth through Buddha Mindfulness (Yȏmbul wangsaeng ch'ȏpgyȏng to 念佛往生捷徑圖), painted in 1750 for the Simgȏmdang 尋劍堂 ofȖnhaesa 銀海寺 in North Kyȏngsang Province, shows the amalgamation of these two themes in a single composition (Figure 9). 34 Near the ornate railing that divides the painting in half, the upper right portion renders Amitābha Buddha preaching in his Western Paradise and the deceased souls being reborn in lotus blossoms in accordance with their respective spiritual capacities. A dragon boat boarded by the disembodied is shown approaching the land of ultimate bliss (Pulgyo Chungang Pangmulgwan 2016, pp. 176-77). A cartouche identifies this scene as "Those who practiced Buddha mindfulness boarding the ship and being reborn" (Yȏmbul chi in sȗngsȏn wangsaeng 念佛之人乘船往生), indicating that the verbal recitation of Amitābha Buddha's name was considered the simplest and most effective means to ascend to the Western Paradise. means for attaining rebirth in the Western Paradise. The sixteen kinds of meditation, a popular iconographic theme of Buddhist paintings during the Koryŏ 高麗 (908-1392), gradually gave way to the theme of the nine grades of rebirth, corresponding to the fourteenth, fifteenth, and sixteenth meditations in the Contemplation Sūtra. The motif of nine grades of rebirth, although it had already appeared in the late Koryŏ, developed into diverse forms and enjoyed wide popularity starting in the eighteenth century due to its strong visual effect of presenting the rebirth in lotus ponds (Chŏng 2007, p. 151). 33 On the other hand, the dragon boat of wisdom refers to an iconographic motif in which Amitābha Buddha receives deceased souls and ferries them to his Western Paradise. The dragon, a protector of Buddhist law, is entrusted with the task of ferrying souls to the other shore. The motif, which dates back to the late thirteenth century, appears to have received heightened interest in the late nineteenth century to the extent of becoming an independent subject for altar paintings and murals in worship halls (C. Kim 2014a).
The rise of the two motifs was linked to the popularity of Pure Land cultic practices, particularly the verbal chanting of the name of Amitābha Buddha (yŏmbul 念佛), to attain rebirth in the Western Paradise among all social strata at the time (Lee 2019, p. 38). Shortcut to Rebirth through Buddha Mindfulness (Yŏmbul wangsaeng ch'ŏpgyŏng to 念佛往生捷徑圖), painted in 1750 for the Simgŏmdang 尋劍堂 of Ŭnhaesa 銀海寺 in North Kyŏngsang Province, shows the amalgamation of these two themes in a single composition ( Figure  9). 34 Near the ornate railing that divides the painting in half, the upper right portion renders Amitābha Buddha preaching in his Western Paradise and the deceased souls being reborn in lotus blossoms in accordance with their respective spiritual capacities. A dragon boat boarded by the disembodied is shown approaching the land of ultimate bliss (Pulgyo Chungang Pangmulgwan 2016, pp. 176-77). A cartouche identifies this scene as "Those who practiced Buddha mindfulness boarding the ship and being reborn" (Yŏmbul chi in sŭngsŏn wangsaeng 念佛之人乘船往生), indicating that the verbal recitation of Amitābha Buddha's name was considered the simplest and most effective means to ascend to the Western Paradise. The combination of the two Pure Land themes is also found in a set of paintings that seems to have been created by Ch'ukyŏn in 1915(Ch'oe 2010Lee 2019, p. 48, 54). The paintings, hung in the main hall of Anyang'am 安養庵 outside the Great East The combination of the two Pure Land themes is also found in a set of paintings that seems to have been created by Ch'ukyȏn in 1915(Ch'oe 2010Lee 2019, p. 48, 54). The paintings, hung in the main hall of Anyang'am 安養庵 outside the Great East Gate of Seoul, show a precedent for pairing the two themes but of a slightly different manner ( Figure 10). In the Anyang'am set, the lower painting illustrates Amitābha Buddha and his attendant bodhisattvas ferrying souls of the disembodied on a dragon boat to the Western Paradise, whereas the upper one shows the souls having arrived and undergoing rebirth inside lotus flowers as they hear the sermon of Amitābha Buddha in his Pure Land (Lee 2019, pp. 48-51). Compared to the Anyang'am paintings, where the two themes are allotted separate frames, Ch'ukyȏn synthesized the two within a vertically elongated frame measuring more than 200 centimeters in height (Figure 8). The journey of deceased souls on board the dragon boat of wisdom to the Western Paradise unfolds above two beams of light that emanate from the top of the white circle. The lower half of the frame is devoted to a dragon boat, whose composition was drawn by the novice Chȏngsun 淨 順 (1901-?) of Haeinsa, crossing a dark sea of rolling waves ( Figure 11). 35 At the center of the dragon-headed boat stands a two-storied, hexagonal structure. Assembled on the second story are the Buddha and bodhisattvas, while the disembodied sit within the cabin below. Amitābha Buddha sits on a high pedestal raising his right hand before his chest. He is accompanied by six bodhisattvas, each of whom stands on a lotus pedestal. Two monks sit back to back, their hands raised in prayer. Inside the hexagonal structure are men and women of all ages. Gate of Seoul, show a precedent for pairing the two themes but of a slightly different manner ( Figure 10). In the Anyang'am set, the lower painting illustrates Amitābha Buddha and his attendant bodhisattvas ferrying souls of the disembodied on a dragon boat to the Western Paradise, whereas the upper one shows the souls having arrived and undergoing rebirth inside lotus flowers as they hear the sermon of Amitābha Buddha in his Pure Land (Lee 2019, pp. 48-51). Compared to the Anyang'am paintings, where the two themes are allotted separate frames, Ch'ukyŏn synthesized the two within a vertically elongated frame measuring more than 200 centimeters in height (Figure 8). The journey of deceased souls on board the dragon boat of wisdom to the Western Paradise unfolds above two beams of light that emanate from the top of the white circle. The lower half of the frame is devoted to a dragon boat, whose composition was drawn by the novice Chŏngsun 淨 順 (1901-?) of Haeinsa, crossing a dark sea of rolling waves ( Figure 11). 35 At the center of the dragon-headed boat stands a two-storied, hexagonal structure. Assembled on the second story are the Buddha and bodhisattvas, while the disembodied sit within the cabin below. Amitābha Buddha sits on a high pedestal raising his right hand before his chest. He is accompanied by six bodhisattvas, each of whom stands on a lotus pedestal. Two monks sit back to back, their hands raised in prayer. Inside the hexagonal structure are men and women of all ages.  The final destination of the disembodied awaits them in the upper portion. The dragon boat, as a result of the prismatic beams that meander from foreground to background, remains subtly linked to the heavenly palace in the clouds. Compositionally speaking, this section bears close resemblance not to paintings of the nine grades from the late nineteenth century but to the central section of paintings on the sixteen kinds of meditation from the late Koryŏ and early Chosŏn periods, attesting to the enduring vitality of this pictorial tradition (Kang 2010, p. 171). The composition introduces heavenly figures in ascending order of spiritual authority. A small pond, demarcated by a balustrade and clouds, contains four souls who have just been reborn in the Pure Land. Beyond them is Avalokiteśvara Bodhisattva surrounded by other bodhisattvas (Figure 12). Intriguingly, it recalls the bodhisattva of compassion appearing in a Chinese single-sheet print circulated among a group of monk painters in the early twentieth century. The Chinese print features the Monk Budai (P'odae hwasang 布袋和尙, fl. 10th century), venerated as Maitreya Buddha in Chan Buddhism, Kṣitigarbha Bodhisttva, and Avalokiteśvara Bodhisattva aligned vertically with the three Buddhas on top (Figure 13). Despite some minor variations, the seated Avalokiteśvara Bodhisattva bears affinities to the one in the print in terms of the attributes in each hand and the hood over his topknot. 36 To the right of the pond stands Avalokiteśvara Bodhisattva in a white robe (Paeg'ŭi Kwanŭm 白衣觀音), one of the thirty-three forms of the bodhisattva that gained wide popularity in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, with his hands clasped in prayer. The final destination of the disembodied awaits them in the upper portion. The dragon boat, as a result of the prismatic beams that meander from foreground to background, remains subtly linked to the heavenly palace in the clouds. Compositionally speaking, this section bears close resemblance not to paintings of the nine grades from the late nineteenth century but to the central section of paintings on the sixteen kinds of meditation from the late Koryȏ and early Chosȏn periods, attesting to the enduring vitality of this pictorial tradition (Kang 2010, p. 171). The composition introduces heavenly figures in ascending order of spiritual authority. A small pond, demarcated by a balustrade and clouds, contains four souls who have just been reborn in the Pure Land. Beyond them is Avalokiteśvara Bodhisattva surrounded by other bodhisattvas (Figure 12). Intriguingly, it recalls the bodhisattva of compassion appearing in a Chinese single-sheet print circulated among a group of monk painters in the early twentieth century. The Chinese print features the Monk Budai (P'odae hwasang 布袋和尙, fl. 10th century), venerated as Maitreya Buddha in Chan Buddhism, Ks . itigarbha Bodhisttva, and Avalokiteśvara Bodhisattva aligned vertically with the three Buddhas on top (Figure 13). Despite some minor variations, the seated Avalokiteśvara Bodhisattva bears affinities to the one in the print in terms of the attributes in each hand and the hood over his topknot. 36 To the right of the pond stands Avalokiteśvara Bodhisattva in a white robe (Paeg'ȗi Kwanȗm 白衣觀音), one of the thirty-three forms of the bodhisattva that gained wide popularity in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, with his hands clasped in prayer.  Further back is another pond with souls of the reborn making offerings to Amitābha Buddha surrounded by bodhisattvas and disciples ( Figure 14). Seated inside the two-storied palatial architecture on the uppermost part is a Buddha with his right hand touching the earth and left hand in his lap ( Figure 15). Although these two mūdras are usually associated with Śākyamuni Buddha, the identity of this Buddha remains somewhat inconclusive due to the ambiguity caused by signboards hung on the first and second stories. "Hall of Immeasurable Light" (Muryangsujŏn 無量壽殿), written on the signboard on the first story, indicates that the hall is dedicated to Amitābha Buddha. By contrast, the  Further back is another pond with souls of the reborn making offerings to Amitābha Buddha surrounded by bodhisattvas and disciples ( Figure 14). Seated inside the two-storied palatial architecture on the uppermost part is a Buddha with his right hand touching the earth and left hand in his lap ( Figure 15). Although these two mūdras are usually associated with Śākyamuni Buddha, the identity of this Buddha remains somewhat inconclusive due to the ambiguity caused by signboards hung on the first and second stories. "Hall of Immeasurable Light" (Muryangsujŏn 無量壽殿), written on the signboard on the first story, indicates that the hall is dedicated to Amitābha Buddha. By contrast, the Further back is another pond with souls of the reborn making offerings to Amitābha Buddha surrounded by bodhisattvas and disciples ( Figure 14). Seated inside the twostoried palatial architecture on the uppermost part is a Buddha with his right hand touching the earth and left hand in his lap ( Figure 15). Although these two mūdras are usually associated withŚākyamuni Buddha, the identity of this Buddha remains somewhat inconclusive due to the ambiguity caused by signboards hung on the first and second stories. "Hall of Immeasurable Light" (Muryangsujȏn 無量壽殿), written on the signboard on the first story, indicates that the hall is dedicated to Amitābha Buddha. By contrast, the signboard on the second story, reading "Hall of Light" (Kwangmyȏngjȏn 光明殿), seemingly identifies the master of the hall as Vairocana Buddha. 37  The left frame is also shown emanating from the white circle in the central section. It largely divides into two sections as well. Along the bottom are the raging waves from which Mount Sumeru, the center of the Buddhist universe, rises. On the left and right, the mountain is flanked by the sun and moon, respectively. A young man carries his parents across a mountainside, an iconographic motif alluding to a passage in the Sūtra on Deep Indebtedness to Oneʼs Father and Mother (Pumo ŭnjung kyŏng 父母恩重經) (Figure 16). Specifically, the passage states that repaying one's parents for their kindness is impossible, even if one were to carry them around Mount Sumeru until one's bones wore down. The frame bears close affinity to the twelfth scene, called "Going around Mount Sumeru" (Chuyo Sumi 周遶須彌), and the fourteenth, called "Making one's parents ascend to the heavenly realms and enjoy pleasure"  The left frame is also shown emanating from the white circle in the central section. It largely divides into two sections as well. Along the bottom are the raging waves from which Mount Sumeru, the center of the Buddhist universe, rises. On the left and right, the mountain is flanked by the sun and moon, respectively. A young man carries his parents across a mountainside, an iconographic motif alluding to a passage in the Sūtra on Deep Indebtedness to Oneʼs Father and Mother (Pumo ŭnjung kyŏng 父母恩重經) (Figure 16). Specifically, the passage states that repaying one's parents for their kindness is impossible, even if one were to carry them around Mount Sumeru until one's bones wore down. The frame bears close affinity to the twelfth scene, called "Going around Mount Sumeru" (Chuyo Sumi 周遶須彌), and the fourteenth, called "Making one's parents ascend to the heavenly realms and enjoy pleasure" (Sanggye k'waerak 上界快樂), in the Chinese and  (Figures 17 and 18). 38 The left frame is also shown emanating from the white circle in the central section. It largely divides into two sections as well. Along the bottom are the raging waves from which Mount Sumeru, the center of the Buddhist universe, rises. On the left and right, the mountain is flanked by the sun and moon, respectively. A young man carries his parents across a mountainside, an iconographic motif alluding to a passage in the Sūtra on Deep Indebtedness to Ones Father and Mother (Pumoȗnjung kyȏng 父母恩重經) ( Figure 16). Specifically, the passage states that repaying one's parents for their kindness is impossible, even if one were to carry them around Mount Sumeru until one's bones wore down. The frame bears close affinity to the twelfth scene, called "Going around Mount Sumeru" (Chuyo Sumi 周須彌), and the fourteenth, called "Making one's parents ascend to the heavenly realms and enjoy pleasure"      Illustrations inserted in the Yongjusa edition of the sūtra are said to have been composed by the prominent court painter Kim Hongdo 金弘道 (b. 1745). Comparative analysis of the illustrations has revealed affinities to Kim Hongdo's paintings and court paintings of the eighteenth century (Pak 2006). Ch'ukyŏn was well aware of Kim Hongdo's oeuvre, as exemplified by his replication of the Album of Genre Paintings in the British Museum. Several leaves of the British Museum's album bear the impression of a seal reading "Mun Hyesan chang" 文蕙山章 (Chin 1999, p. 393;Shin 2014, pp. 126-29). Hyesan was a dharma sobriquet that Ch'ukyŏn used primarily in his early career before returning to lay life in the late 1890s. Given that Ch'ukyŏn produced Guardian Deities (Sinjung to 神衆圖) for Yongjusa in 1913, he may have possessed firsthand knowledge of the printing blocks or imprints of the sūtra in the temple collection. 39 The upper part portrays those who are heading to the heavenly palace as a result of their children's dedication of the sūtra (Figure 19). Scattering flowers from their baskets, two heavenly maidens are welcoming the righteous souls to the heavenly palace, represented by a hexagonal building. Given the theme of filial responsibility governing the lower half of the frame, the building seems to have represented the Palace of Tuṣita Heaven (Tosolch'ŏn kung 兜率天宮), although it is not identified with a signboard. Tuṣita Heaven, the fourth of the six heavens in the desire realm, is where Śākyamuni Buddha dwelled before his birth in the physical world and where his late mother Queen Māyā is said to have been reborn. It is also the Pure Land where Maitreya Bodhisattva is said to have waited until his descent to earth. The Buddha, seated on a blue lotus throne upon a hexagonal pedestal, touches the earth with his right hand while raising his left before his chest ( Figure 20). He is surrounded by men and women wearing distinctive headgear, monks, bodhisattvas, and heavenly maidens. The identity of this Buddha remains ambiguous, like the Buddha depicted in the uppermost part of the central frame, due to the rather unorthodox iconography. Behind the hexagonal pavilion are oddly shaped rocks and trees full of heavenly peaches against an azure sky. The peaches recall those depicted in folk paintings from the late Chosŏn (Kang 2010, p. 180). The azure sky is filled with musical instruments that are playing of their own accord. Ch'ukyŏn appears to have borrowed these motifs from the decorative paintings that were wildly popular among residents of the capital from the late Chosŏn onward. 40 Illustrations inserted in the Yongjusa edition of the sūtra are said to have been composed by the prominent court painter Kim Hongdo 金弘道 (b. 1745). Comparative analysis of the illustrations has revealed affinities to Kim Hongdo's paintings and court paintings of the eighteenth century (Pak 2006). Ch'ukyȏn was well aware of Kim Hongdo's oeuvre, as exemplified by his replication of the Album of Genre Paintings in the British Museum. Several leaves of the British Museum's album bear the impression of a seal reading "Mun Hyesan chang" 文蕙山章 (Chin 1999, p. 393;Shin 2014, pp. 126-29). Hyesan was a dharma sobriquet that Ch'ukyȏn used primarily in his early career before returning to lay life in the late 1890s. Given that Ch'ukyȏn produced Guardian Deities (Sinjung to 神衆圖) for Yongjusa in 1913, he may have possessed firsthand knowledge of the printing blocks or imprints of the sūtra in the temple collection. 39 The upper part portrays those who are heading to the heavenly palace as a result of their children's dedication of the sūtra (Figure 19). Scattering flowers from their baskets, two heavenly maidens are welcoming the righteous souls to the heavenly palace, represented by a hexagonal building. Given the theme of filial responsibility governing the lower half of the frame, the building seems to have represented the Palace of Tus . ita Heaven (Tosolch'ȏn kung 兜率天宮), although it is not identified with a signboard. Tus . ita Heaven, the fourth of the six heavens in the desire realm, is whereŚākyamuni Buddha dwelled before his birth in the physical world and where his late mother Queen Māyā is said to have been reborn. It is also the Pure Land where Maitreya Bodhisattva is said to have waited until his descent to earth. The Buddha, seated on a blue lotus throne upon a hexagonal pedestal, touches the earth with his right hand while raising his left before his chest (Figure 20). He is surrounded by men and women wearing distinctive headgear, monks, bodhisattvas, and heavenly maidens. The identity of this Buddha remains ambiguous, like the Buddha depicted in the uppermost part of the central frame, due to the rather unorthodox iconography. Behind the hexagonal pavilion are oddly shaped rocks and trees full of heavenly peaches against an azure sky. The peaches recall those depicted in folk paintings from the late Chosȏn (Kang 2010, p. 180). The azure sky is filled with musical instruments that are playing of their own accord. Ch'ukyȏn appears to have borrowed these motifs from the decorative paintings that were wildly popular among residents of the capital from the late Chosȏn onward. 40   The painting as a whole, from the manner of writing in the inscription to the overall composition, to the combination of iconography, has no precedent in the history of Korean Buddhist painting. The novel composition, as Choi Yeub has noted, must have been borne of a strong will to create a painting specifically for the preaching hall of an urban propagation space at the center of Seoul (Ch'oe 2014a, p. 208). The right frame appears to have been depicted emanating from the white circle. What might have been depicted at the end of the dark ray? Some suggest that the right frame may have illustrated both good and bad deeds as well as the hell reserved for sinners in the afterlife (Sŏkjŏng 1997, p. 228). Others suggest that the right frame would have depicted scenes of hell in opposition to scenes on the left (Ch'oe 2012b, pp. 288-89;Ch'oe 2014a, p. 207;Kang 2015, p. 365). As we have examined above, the surviving two frames illustrate different means for ascending  The painting as a whole, from the manner of writing in the inscription to the overall composition, to the combination of iconography, has no precedent in the history of Korean Buddhist painting. The novel composition, as Choi Yeub has noted, must have been borne of a strong will to create a painting specifically for the preaching hall of an urban propagation space at the center of Seoul (Ch'oe 2014a, p. 208). The right frame appears to have been depicted emanating from the white circle. What might have been depicted at the end of the dark ray? Some suggest that the right frame may have illustrated both good and bad deeds as well as the hell reserved for sinners in the afterlife (Sŏkjŏng 1997, p. 228). Others suggest that the right frame would have depicted scenes of hell in opposition to scenes on the left (Ch'oe 2012b, pp. 288-89; Ch'oe 2014a, p. 207; Kang 2015, p. 365). As we have examined above, the surviving two frames illustrate different means for ascending The painting as a whole, from the manner of writing in the inscription to the overall composition, to the combination of iconography, has no precedent in the history of Korean Buddhist painting. The novel composition, as Choi Yeub has noted, must have been borne of a strong will to create a painting specifically for the preaching hall of an urban propagation space at the center of Seoul (Ch'oe 2014a, p. 208). The right frame appears to have been depicted emanating from the white circle. What might have been depicted at the end of the dark ray? Some suggest that the right frame may have illustrated both good and bad deeds as well as the hell reserved for sinners in the afterlife (Sȏkjȏng 1997, p. 228). Others suggest that the right frame would have depicted scenes of hell in opposition to scenes on the left (Ch'oe 2012b, pp. 288-89;2014a, p. 207;Kang 2015, p. 365). As we have examined above, the surviving two frames illustrate different means for ascending to the Western Paradise. Given the symmetrical composition of the painting as a whole, the right frame may have represented yet another means of ascending to the Pure Land.

Propagating Buddhism in New and Old Styles
The founding of an urban Buddhist temple on the former site of Sȏnwȏnjȏn was a great success in the decades-long effort to restore Buddhism to Seoul. Surely, the dedication of Three Gates in a Single Mind was part and parcel of the propagation enterprise. The painting differs not only from late Chosȏn Buddhist paintings but also from contemporaneous Korean Buddhist paintings produced specifically for propagation halls. More than 80 Buddhist paintings are recorded to have been produced for urban propagation temples, variously called p'ogyoso, p'ogyodang, or kyodang 敎堂 in their dedicatory inscriptions (Ch'oe 2014a, p. 206n14). This number is culled from a collection of approximately 3200 votive inscriptions remaining on extant Korean Buddhist paintings produced up until 1950 (Kogyȏng et al. 2011). 41 Generally speaking, the subject matter of these paintings does not deviate from the tradition of late Chosȏn Buddhist paintings, such as buddhas and bodhisattvas, guardian deities, seven stars (ch'ilsȏng 七星), and minor gods, such as the mountain god (sansin 山神), hermit sage (toksȏng 獨聖), and King Yama (Hyȏnwang 現王). In comparison, Three Gates in a Single Mind is unprecedented in conception, idiosyncratic in iconography, and innovative in painterly technique. Ch'ukyȏn created a novel composition that none of his contemporaries had seen before.
Yet, this modern Buddhist painting is still replete with old motifs, such as the dragon boat of wisdom, that immediately recall the lay salvationism of the previous century. In other words, makers of the new Buddhist painting were aware of the affective power of the age-old motif and made the best use of it rather than eschewing it. This iconographic choice in turn raises the question of viewership. Who, then, were its intended viewers? Or, who constituted the congregation of this urban propagation space? Further questions arise: what type of Buddhist ideas and practices did Yi Hoegwang and like-minded monks propagate in this establishment? Or, what type of initiatives did they implement to facilitate city dwellers' conversion to Buddhism in an environment of such competition amongst religions? As the modern transformation of Korean Buddhism presented new challenges, what roles did religious icons and traditional cultic practices play in an urban Buddhist temple? To answer these questions, we must first examine Yi Hoegwang's vision of propagation, which was borne out of Korean Buddhism at the start of the twentieth century, and the nature of congregation at the propagation space.
Many of the reform-minded Buddhist leaders concurred that Korean Buddhism had gone to the two extremes of the clergy-centered tradition of Sȏn Buddhism, practiced in temples in the deep mountains, and lay Buddhism, which was often associated with ritual practices geared toward achieving secular desires that ranged from attaining better rebirth to enjoying good health and longevity to obtaining a son. The gulf between the ideal of monasticism and the reality of lay Buddhism seemed unbridgeable to some reformers such as Han Yong'un, inarguably the most vocal opponent to the attempt to synthesize the Wȏnjong and the Sōtōshū in 1910 (Hur 2010, p. 89). For instance, Han Yong'un called for an end to old practices of Korean Buddhism, including elitist institutional Buddhism and lay salvationism. Critical of lay-driven, or vulgar, Buddhist practices, Han Yong'un even argued for the demolition of yȏmbultang 念佛堂 (lit. "Chanting Hall"), the focus of verbal chanting of Amitābha Buddha's name, as well as the removal of all divine images except for that of the Buddha, to restore what he regarded as the essence of Buddhism (Han 1913, pp. 27-31, 43-53). 42 The recitation of which Han Yong'un was so critical corresponds to the Ten-Thousand-Day Buddha Recitation Assembly (Manil yȏmbulhoe 萬一念佛會) that had gained wide popularity across social groups from the late nineteenth century onward (Cho 2003, pp. 103-8;Lee 2019, p. 38). The Buddhist community of monastics and lay followers was devoted to the ritualized recitation of Amitābha Buddha's name for ten thousand days, which amounts to more than twenty-seven years, in aspirations for rebirth in the Western Paradise. Typically, members of the Ten-Thousand-Day Buddha Recitation Assembly chanted Buddha's name loudly to the pounding of a drum and gong. Like Han Yong'un, some monks criticized the noisy and even agitating character of the Buddha-recitation practice (S. Kim 2019, pp. 260-64). Without a doubt, Pure Land zeal was one of the key drivers of Buddhist art and architecture in the late nineteenth century. 43 Halls dedicated to such lay-driven practice, usually called Yȏmbultang or Taebang 大房 (lit. "Large Chamber"), were erected across the peninsula, 44 and Buddhist paintings with Pure Land themes were produced for such halls under the auspices of members of these Buddhist communities. 45 Despite disputes over political issues, Korean Buddhist leaders perceived propagation as a vehicle for revitalizing their religion (Nathan 2018, pp. 55-60). Many suggested multiple forms of propagation, such as publishing newspapers and journals, translating and widely circulating Buddhist sūtras, and implementing educational and social welfare programs in their reform proposals, which appeared in print in the 1910s and 1920s. It is notable that Yi Hoegwang carried out almost all of the propagation methods put forward in contemporaneous reform proposals, first at Wȏnhȗngsa and later at Haeinsa, although many of his works came to a halt due to the turbulence of the times. For instance, he served as principal of the first modern educational institute for monks, Myȏngjin School 明進學 校, from 1908 to 1910, published the first modern Buddhist journal in 1910, and played a seminal role in the establishment of Kakhwangsa in 1910(Taehan Pulgyo Chogyejong 1998Kim 2012, p. 233).
Yi Hoegwang strove to find a middle ground in bringing Buddhism closer to society, while serving the populace and simultaneously making best use of lay support. With the founding of the Buddhist Central Propagation Space, he was better equipped to carry out various outreach programs for propagation, although his abbotship only lasted from 1920 to 1924. 46 His vision can be glimpsed in a piece of writing published in the magazine Chōsen 朝鮮 one month after the successful celebration of the Buddha's birthday, during which Three Gates in a Single Mind was dedicated. Yi Hoegwang revealed his strong ambitions to galvanize Korean Buddhist monks and work for the public good. After narrating the glorious past of Korean Buddhism in the Silla 新罹 and Koryȏ periods, he faulted the Chosȏn government for the eventual decline of Buddhism while crediting the colonial government for promulgating the Temple Ordinance of 1911, under which Korean Buddhist temples were vitalized and the rights of six thousand Korean Buddhist monastics were recovered. He further claimed that Korean Buddhist monks, who had been isolated in the remote mountains, needed to fundamentally reform themselves. In Yi Hoegwang's opinion, Buddhism needed to be transplanted from the remote mountains to function as a social religion and no longer the preserve of monastics. Korean Buddhist leaders, he claimed, should engage in modernizing enterprises of social welfare that contribute to the state and society. As for specific solutions, he suggested the establishment of clinics, educational institutions (kyoyuk changnyȏwȏn 敎育奬勵院), facilities for rehabilitation and public hygiene, such as free accommodations, employment agencies, public baths, and laundries, and correctional centers for tenants (sojagin kyohwawȏn 小作人敎化院) (Yi 1921, pp. 61-65). 47 Herein, Yi Hoegwang not only repeated colonizers' claims of the Chosȏn's failure to continue the glorious legacy of Korean Buddhism but also resonated with his contemporary Buddhist reformers, some of whom were his political opponents, revealing the complex realities of colonial Buddhism.
In practice, the Buddhist Central Propagation Space harmonized the "old and new methods" of propagation to win lay adherents. 48 It implemented a variety of modern outreach programs-from public lectures to larger-scale ones such as education of women, medical social work, and charity-in order to increase its social presence and participation. For instance, the urban Buddhist establishment opened its doors to lay organizations so that they could hold regular meetings and open forums on social issues. 49 It hosted public lectures organized by the Great Meeting of Korean Buddhism (Chōsen Bukkyō Taikai 朝鮮佛敎大會), the lay Buddhist movement of pro-Japanese orientation established in 1920 under the pretense of building bridges between Japanese and Korean Buddhist communities, on several occasions. 50 Speakers included elite Korean monks such as Yi Hoegwang himself, Paek Ch'owȏl 白初月 (1878-1944, and Kim Yȏngsu 金映遂 (1884-1967, influential Japanese missionaries such as Gotō Tangan, with whom Yi Hoegwang attempted a merger of Korean Buddhism in early 1920, and Henmi Tsūkan 逸見通漢 of the Japanese Nichirenshū 日蓮宗, and prominent Korean and Japanese lay Buddhists such as Yi Wȏnsok 李元錫, a key member of the Great Meeting of Korean Buddhism. 51 The women's Buddhist association (puinhoe 婦人會) of the propagation space also held a lecture meeting where female lay Buddhists gave public talks. 52 In July 1921, the Buddhist Central Propagation Space founded the Kyȏngȏsong Women's Culture School 京城女子文化學 院 to provide women post-secondary education on the arts, philosophy, and language. 53 Two years later, the Pulgyo Chejungwȏn 佛敎濟衆院, the first modern Buddhist medical clinic, was founded by Yi Hoegwang and his partner Chang Il 張一-who turned out to be a fraud-within the precinct of the Buddhist Central Propagation Space for the welfare of society, despite financial difficulties caused by embezzlement in 1922. 54 The Buddhist clinic intended to provide medical care for general patients at actual cost. 55 Apart from these modern programs, Yi Hoegwang adhered to dual practices of Sȏn and Kyo that had been the pillars of elitist monastic Buddhist tradition. He attempted to bring the orthodox practice of elitist Korean Buddhism to the heart of the capital. From the beginning, he established a meditation room within the precinct of the urban temple and invited an eminent Sȏn master from Haeinsa (Koam 1990, p. 375). In May 1922, the propagation space invited ten dharma masters renowned for their erudition and virtue to study Buddhist doctrines for two months. The dharma masters would have led the recitation of sūtras (chȏndok 轉讀)-the practice of scanning scriptures by reading the beginning, middle, and end of each chapter-in the morning and given dharma talks in the traditional style (ku chedo sȏlpȏp 舊制度說法) in the afternoon. 56 This was followed by seated meditation in the evening. The propagation space also planned to invite distinguished guests to give public talks on Sundays. 57 The foregoing analysis reveals the astounding feat of Yi Hoegwang and his propagation space in the early 1920s. Haeinsa and lay Buddhist followers, particularly court ladies and women of high social standing, were the two pillars that buttressed his cause financially. On the one hand, Yi Hoegwang-as abbot of one of the most prestigious head temples-possessed the power to manage the properties of Haeinsa and its branch temples, and made use of these properties within the framework of the Temple Ordinance. On the other hand, he received lavish patronage from laywomen who were traditionally ardent supporters of Buddhism. A snapshot of Yi Hoegwang's laywomen followers can be glimpsed in a newspaper article published in the wake of his attempt to merge Korean Buddhism with the Myōshinji lineage of the Linzaishū. 58 Other sources also indicate that laywomen Buddhists were the main benefactors of propagation halls in Seoul in the early twentieth century (Hyedam 2002, p. 24). Ownership of the Sȏwȏnjȏn area, which had been divided from the Tȏksugung in March 1920, was transferred to Ch'angdȏkkung-where Sungjong 純宗 (1874-1926, r. 1907-1910) resided-until 1931(Chang and Chȏn 2013). Yi Hoegwang was reported to have arranged installment payments to the Office of Yi Royal Household that managed properties of the former royal house. In retrospect, he could purchase the property by taking out a loan against the land owned by Haeinsa. 59 However, this alone does not suffice to explain how he got hold of this land that so many Japanese entrepreneurs coveted.
Ch'ȏn Ilch'ȏng 千一淸 (also known by her dharma name Chȏnggongsim 淨空心, b. 1846), who served the last ruler of the short-lived Great Han Empire at Ch'angdȏkkung as one of the highest-ranking court ladies, seems to have worked as the crucial intermediary between Yi Hoegwang and the colonial government ( Figure 21). Lady Ch'ȏn, brought into the court at the age of four, possessed wealth and power thanks to her close connections to Chosȏn's royal court (Kim 1987, pp. 20, 59, 400-1). Like members of the royal family and other court ladies of the late Chosȏn, she had been a devout Buddhist from a very young age to the extent of being described in a newspaper as a "model Buddhist believer." 60 When Noble Consort néeȎm (posthumously entitled Sunhȏn hwanggwibi 純獻皇貴妃 嚴氏, 1854-1911) was alive, she served as a go-between to find temples that could dedicate prayers for the royal family. On behalf of her queen, Lady Chȏn oftentimes went outside the four gates of Seoul to meet monks and offer financial resources in exchange for prayer services and temple repairs (Kim 2012, p. 251). 61 When Yi Hoegwang came to Seoul in early 1907, she is said to have heard rumors that a great master was in town. She then invited him and had him stay at her residence whenever he visited Seoul thereafter (Hyedam 2002, pp. 119-20). 62 As a devout Buddhist, she patronized the production of Buddhist paintings on her own accord with other court ladies even before she met Yi Hoegwang. 63 In 1908 she donated a large sum of resources for the construction of Kunghyȏngdang 窮玄堂, where monks would engage in doctrinal study, as well as the renovation of Kwanȗmjȏn 觀音殿 into Simgȏmdang, a building for monks' residence, at Haeinsa for which Yi Hoegwang exhorted believers to give alms. 64 He supervised the whole process. 65 A stone stele, erected at Haeinsa in 1919, further attests to her unfailing support of Yi Hoegwang over the years. 66 Religions 2021, 12, x FOR PEER REVIEW 23 of 32 family and other court ladies of the late Chosŏn, she had been a devout Buddhist from a very young age to the extent of being described in a newspaper as a "model Buddhist believer." 60 When Noble Consort née Ŏm (posthumously entitled Sunhŏn hwanggwibi 純獻皇貴妃 嚴氏, 1854-1911) was alive, she served as a go-between to find temples that could dedicate prayers for the royal family. On behalf of her queen, Lady Chŏn oftentimes went outside the four gates of Seoul to meet monks and offer financial resources in exchange for prayer services and temple repairs (Kim 2012, p. 251). 61 When Yi Hoegwang came to Seoul in early 1907, she is said to have heard rumors that a great master was in town. She then invited him and had him stay at her residence whenever he visited Seoul thereafter (Hyedam 2002, pp. 119-20). 62 As a devout Buddhist, she patronized the production of Buddhist paintings on her own accord with other court ladies even before she met Yi Hoegwang. 63 In 1908 she donated a large sum of resources for the construction of Kunghyŏngdang 窮玄堂, where monks would engage in doctrinal study, as well as the renovation of Kwanŭmjŏn 觀音殿 into Simgŏmdang, a building for monks' residence, at Haeinsa for which Yi Hoegwang exhorted believers to give alms. 64 He supervised the whole process. 65 A stone stele, erected at Haeinsa in 1919, further attests to her unfailing support of Yi Hoegwang over the years. 66 Figure 21. Queen (center) and court ladies, including Ch'ŏn Ilch'ŏng to her right, on the day of the Queen's sericultural ceremony at Sŏhyanggak of Ch'angdŏkkung. After (Kim 1987, n.p.).
More importantly, she contributed to efforts to modernize Korean Buddhism during the pre-colonial and colonial eras. Drawing on a wide network of relationships both inside and outside the court, Lady Ch'ŏn helped Yi Hoegwang to establish the Wŏnjong and received a donation of the property from the royal house when Kakhwangsa was founded (Kim 2012, pp. 251-52;Kang and Pak 2002, p. 46). Furthermore, she gave alms to victims of natural disasters and made several generous contributions for the cause of women's education. 67 In a piece of writing submitted to the Buddhist journal Chosŏn Pulgyo wŏlbo 朝鮮佛敎月報, she urged laywomen to abandon the degenerate practices of the old days and to engage in charity work (Ch'ŏn 1911, pp. 44-47). Given their continued collaboration in the 1910s and 1920s, it is highly plausible that Lady Ch'ŏn helped Yi Hoegwang pull strings in the Office of Yi Royal Household. She continuously supported him by donating large sums for the founding of the Pulygo Chejungwŏn. 68 It is noteworthy that Lady Ch'ŏn and other prominent lay women Buddhists were practitioners and patrons of Pure Land Buddhism. As examined previously, Three Gates in a Single Mind was commissioned for the Sŏlpŏpchŏn of the propagation space where weekly dharma talks and special guest lectures would have been held (Figure 8). The painting must have looked modern to the congregation with its painterly technique and bold composition that had never been attempted before in Korean Buddhist paintings. At Figure 21. Queen (center) and court ladies, including Ch'ȏn Ilch'ȏng to her right, on the day of the Queen's sericultural ceremony at Sȏhyanggak of Ch'angdȏkkung. After (Kim 1987, n.p.).
More importantly, she contributed to efforts to modernize Korean Buddhism during the pre-colonial and colonial eras. Drawing on a wide network of relationships both inside and outside the court, Lady Ch'ȏn helped Yi Hoegwang to establish the Wȏnjong and received a donation of the property from the royal house when Kakhwangsa was founded (Kim 2012, pp. 251-52;Kang and Pak 2002, p. 46). Furthermore, she gave alms to victims of natural disasters and made several generous contributions for the cause of women's education. 67 In a piece of writing submitted to the Buddhist journal Chosȏn Pulgyo wȏlbo 朝 鮮佛敎月報, she urged laywomen to abandon the degenerate practices of the old days and to engage in charity work (Ch'ȏn 1911, pp. 44-47). Given their continued collaboration in the 1910s and 1920s, it is highly plausible that Lady Ch'ȏn helped Yi Hoegwang pull strings in the Office of Yi Royal Household. She continuously supported him by donating large sums for the founding of the Pulygo Chejungwȏn. 68 It is noteworthy that Lady Ch'ȏn and other prominent lay women Buddhists were practitioners and patrons of Pure Land Buddhism. As examined previously, Three Gates in a Single Mind was commissioned for the Sȏlpȏpchȏn of the propagation space where weekly dharma talks and special guest lectures would have been held (Figure 8). The painting must have looked modern to the congregation with its painterly technique and bold composition that had never been attempted before in Korean Buddhist paintings. At the same time, it was decipherable enough for laywomen Buddhists like Lady Ch'ȏn, who had been a member of the Ten-Thousand-Day Buddha Recitation Assembly formed in 1891 at Pogwangsa, a temple that received lavish patronage from members of the royal family and court ladies. 69 There were few such assemblies in the capital area until the very end of the nineteenth century, due to restrictive measures against Buddhist monks. Yet, urban lay Buddhists were able to participate in this cultic practice at temples closer to home from the beginning of the twentieth century. In the early 1910s, three temples located in the capital area-Hwagyesa 華溪寺, Pongwȏnsa 奉元寺, and Kaeunsa 開運寺-launched the Ten-Thousand-Day Buddha Recitation Assembly. Given the chief location of the Buddhist Central Propagation Space and Yi Hoegwang's adherence to the Sȏn and Kyo, both in terms of practices and appellation in the traditional manner, it seems unlikely that the propagation space formed such an assembly or encouraged loud chanting of the name of Amitābha Buddha. However, aspirations for the Pure Land were the perennial motive driving lay Buddhists to patronize Buddhist temples and to engage in a variety of social works, as in the case of Lady Ch'ȏn. As a way to fulfill the religious aspirations of many lay adherents, Yi Hoegwang seems to have commissioned Three Minds in a Single Gate, which illustrates the promise of salvation for the devout, instead of building a hall for Pure Land practices or forming the Ten-Thousand-Day Buddha Recitation Assembly.

Conclusions
The establishment of the Buddhist Central Propagation Space in 1920, examined thoroughly for the first time in this study, shows a meaningful yet ultimately unsuccessful attempt at modernizing Korean Buddhism in the dynamics of the colonial Buddhism. Although the propagation space is significant in the history of Buddhist propagation and respatialization of Seoul during the early colonial period, it has not received the attention it deserves, due to the pro-colonialist undertakings of its founder, who has been severely criticized in later historiography. The propagation space, as my analysis has revealed, was a byproduct of Yi Hoegwang's incessant attempts to achieve governmentality for Korean Buddhism, even if it meant collusion with the colonizer. I have also discussed the seminal contribution of Lady Ch'ȏn to the founding of the propagation space, thereby restoring the voice of one important laywoman in the modernization of Korean Buddhism. Enshrining a gilt Buddha statue in place of the portraits of rulers of the bygone dynasty seemingly attests to the success of Yi Hoegwang, who had long strived to reinstate Buddhism in the center of state and society. In this sense, the founding of the Buddhist Central Propagation Space was surely a glorious moment for those who sought to modernize Korean Buddhism in their own way. However, the moment was far from long-lasting. The properties of the propagation space, except for a Buddha statue, were seized since Yi Hoegwang could not even pay loan interest. 70 In 1924, Yi Hoegwang eventually lost his abbotship of Haeinsa and its branch in Seoul due to the huge financial scandal. 71 Lady Ch'ȏn also suffered from disgrace and financial difficulties in the last days of her life. 72 Although the propagation space lasted until the early 1930s, it appears not to have regained the fame and social presence it had enjoyed in the early 1920s. 73 Shifting the focus from nationalistic critique of Yi Hoegwang's pro-Japanese endeavors to his propagating efforts, I have illuminated the role of this propagation space in restoring the ritual and material culture of Korean Buddhism-denounced by some contemporary Buddhist reformers-to the heart of the colonized capital. In so doing, this study has broadened the horizons of previous studies on the governmentality and propagation of Korean Buddhism in the early colonial period. In practice, the propagation space harmonized the new and old methods of propagation to win lay adherents, while attracting women of high social standing who had been fervent supporters of Korean Buddhist temples in times of hardship under the Chosȏn rule. My discussion of Three Gates in a Single Mind, produced for the Sȏlpȏpchȏn of the propagation space on the Buddha's birthday in 1921, further illuminates the complex dynamics among leading Korean monastics like Yi Hoegwang, famous monk painters such as Ch'ukyȏn, and lay Buddhist women in the early colonial period. Three Gates in a Single Mind must have been appealing to temple-goers of the time, due to its dramatic presentation of visual wonders. Deviation from the norms of late Chosȏn Buddhist paintings may have been understood in the contemporary movement of bringing Buddhism closer to the masses in the early colonial period. In this sense, the genre of Buddhist paintings communicated more with society and the public, reflecting the social conditions of the day.
Three Gates in a Single Mind stands out for its unique iconography and bold composition even among contemporaneous Buddhist paintings similarly produced for propagation halls. The visual wonder is largely achieved by Ch'ukyȏn's deft employment of pictorial idioms borrowed from both secular and Buddhist traditions. Ch'ukyȏn made apt use of motifs derived from contemporaneous folk paintings in the depiction of heavenly palaces and beautiful flowers and plants, while also incorporating the motifs of the salvific dragon boat and the nine grades of rebirth in the Western Paradise from the recent past. The salvific dragon boat, featured so prominently in the central frame, was surely one of the motifs that could arouse lay interest in Buddhism for its overt salvationism. Although the motif was not frequently painted in the colonial period, it seems to have been considered important by Ch'ukyȏn perhaps due to its affective power. The combination of the dragon boat and the nine grades of rebirth, with which Ch'ukyȏn had experimented in the pair of paintings at Anyang'am, may have fulfilled lay Buddhist followers' strong aspirations for the Pure Land. Hung inside the Sȏlpȏpchȏn of the Buddhist Central Propagation Space, the painting must have served as an icon to which modernizing elites of Korean Buddhism as well as lay Buddhist adherents paid respect before dharma talks, public lectures, and other activities. As such, the painting not only attests to the vitality of the Pure Land zeal but also the new meaning ascribed to the much denounced desires of lay patrons. As I have demonstrated above, Three Gates in a Single Mind was designed to convey moral lessons to Buddhist devotees as well as encourage them to do good. This practice, new to Buddhist altarpieces, was designed for this new type of religious space where the public could reformulate themselves spiritually and learn the true spirit of Buddhism.
Funding: This research received no external funding.
Acknowledgments: Parts of this study were first presented at the panel "Empathy Seen in Korean Visual Art in a Time of Crisis" at the annual conference of the Association of Asian Studies in March 2021. I am grateful to Todd A. Henry, who served on the panel, and participants at the conference for their thoughtful comments on my presentation. My special thanks goes to Choi Yeub (Ch'oe Yȏp) for granting me permission to use her photographs and sharing her deep knowledge of modern Korean Buddhist paintings and to Lee Jongsu for sharing his expertise on late Chosȏn Buddhism. I would like to also thank my two anonymous reviewers for their constructive feedback on an earlier version of this essay. Needless to say, any errors that may remain are my own.

Conflicts of Interest:
The author declares no conflict of interest.