#01 TEMPLE JOURNEY

Our journey begins in quiet temples across Korea. Through photography, craftsmanship, and traditional objects, we preserve thebeauty of Korean Buddhist culture in wearable forms.

우리 여정은 한국의 고요한 사찰에서 시작됩니다.사진과 장인의 손길, 그리고 전통의 오브제를 통해 한국 불교 문화의 아름다움을 몸에 지닐 수 있는 형태로 이어갑니다.

BUJUK begins with this relationship between the object and the person who carries it.

Through photography, field observation, and conversations with craftsmen, we study the forms, materials, and quiet details found within Korean Buddhist culture. Rather than reproducing sacred objects as souvenirs, we carefully reinterpret their presence for contemporary life.

A strand of 108 prayer beads can exist beyond the temple walls. It can rest beside a bed, travel inside a bag, or remain quietly in the hand. Its meaning is not defined by where it is placed, but by the time and attention given to it.

Each BUJUK object is shaped by this idea.

We preserve traces of traditional forms while allowing materials, proportions, and textures to speak in a contemporary language. Natural stone, wood, seed, and metal are selected not for perfection, but for their individual surfaces and gradual change over time.

No two objects carry exactly the same marks.

Like the temples and landscapes that inspire us, they continue to change through light, touch, and use.

BUJUK is an ongoing record of Korean Buddhist objects, rituals, and visual culture.

A journey through prayer, craftsmanship, and stillness.

Our journey begins in quiet temples across Korea.

In places shaped by mountains, stone, wood, and time, we observe the objects that have accompanied Buddhist practice for generations. Prayer beads resting beside worn scriptures. Wooden surfaces

polished slowly by hands. Small objects carried, touched, and returned to through years of repetition.

These objects were never created simply to decorate a space. They were made to be held. To count a prayer. To mark a moment of stillness.

To remain close to the body during long periods of contemplation.

#02 THE PRACTITIONER

#03 OBJECTS OF PRAYER