Museum 1 (M1) houses a collection of traditional Korean art, of which 36 pieces are designated national treasures. Included in the collection are landscapes and folk paintings, traditional ceramics, and porcelain, such as
Celadon and
Buncheong, a bluish-green traditional Korean stoneware; 14th-century daggers, crowns, earrings and ornaments; and Buddhist art, sculptures, paintings, and manuscripts. Two large geometric volumes, a reverse cone and a simple hexahedral shape, form Museum 1. Mario Botta utilized terra cotta bricks on the building's façade. The interior of Museum 1 includes a lobby, rotunda, and exhibition spaces. The core of the Leeum Museum is the basement lobby created by the reverse cone penetrating the ground. Museum 2 and the Samsung Child Education & Culture Center are all connected here. Museumgoers begin and end their tours in this area. Above the lobby is the white-walled rotunda. The exhibition spaces in Museum 1 are hexahedral. Visitors begin at the top and walk down, visiting each of the four floors, which house ceramics, swords, jewelry, and other traditional Korean artifacts. Many famous artists such as
Damien Hirst,
Warhol,
Rothko,
Yves Klein, and
Donald Judd have permanent exhibition spaces. The basement levels of the museum face the sunken garden and gabion walls. The gabion cages are composed of iron and filled with rocks unearthed during the construction process. The sunken garden includes birch trees and ferns. The main exhibition hall makes use of post-tension building techniques The Black concrete box holds temporary exhibits. Located over the parking garage, the Sculpture Garden showcases sculptural exhibits. The garden consists of a long rectangular strip of gravel and vegetation and the wooden deck that frames it. Recently two of
Louise Bourgeois's
Maman sculptures were featured in the Sculpture Garden. == Information ==