ILHWA KIM
Ilhwa Kim (b. 1967 in South Korea) creates works that are composed of tens of thousands of seed units. Each seed unit has a combination of straight lines and circles, which compose a tiny single universe. The materials are created personally for every single universe. The Korean artist dyes each sheet of paper by hand with thousands of different colours cutting and rolling the layers of paper to make them rigid. It gives Kim an emotional bonding to every single universe. Not a single universe has the same shape, look or colour in her work.
The tactile universe pushes away the distinction between sculpture and painting; tenderly relaxed conversation goes on ceaselessly between the sculptural weight and tactile painting quality. The universe transforms dramatically from afar to close up. The sense of completion never comes as each perception betrays the previous one from moments before. Kim’s universes are free from an optimum point of view. Taking a look at the work closely, you can witness the seeds lodged tightly in the surface, pushing and pulling themselves to sprout. However, the moment you watch it from a distance, the work transforms into waves lashing out from the confines of the work.
Acquired by museums, some of Kim’s selected solo shows include: “Korean Contemporary Art: The Present and Future” at the Kowloon Art Museum, Seoul, “Golden Eyes” in Coex, Seoul, "Seed Universe 天下圖," in Dennos Museum, USA, "Beyond Visibility" at Gallery Hue, Singapore and "Seeds of the Universe", "Seed System", "Sensory Portrait" at the House of Fine Art Gallery, in Mayfair, London.
Space Station 6
2019
Hand dyed Hanji paper
75.6 x 88.2 x 6.3 in. / 192 x 224 x 16 cm.
Price on request