Ilhwa Kim | The Geographic

1 February - 13 March 2025
  • Maybaum Gallery is thrilled to present The Geographic, the latest body of work by Ilhwa Kim in her second solo...

     Maybaum Gallery is thrilled to present The Geographic, the latest body of work by Ilhwa Kim in her second solo show with the gallery. Kim's alluring paper compositions have won her four major awards, including The Grand Art Prize, MANIF Seoul 1999 Excellence Award, and The 16th Grand Art Exhibition of Korea. Her work is also part of multiple permanent collections including the Seongkok Museum and the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art in Seoul. Other significant exhibitions and solo shows include: Seed Universe at Dennos Museum in Michigan and the Guangzhou Opera House in China, Beyond Visibility at Gallery Hue in Singapore, and the artist’s solo exhibitions at Seonam Museum in Seoul, and Chuiong Art Gallery in China. Other international exhibitions include: Korean Contemporary in Seoul, The Monaco Masters Show in Monaco, Light and Shadows in Beirut, The Assembly: Cumulative Practices in Contemporary Art in Hong Kong, Touch of Korea in Budapest, and Regeneration in Paris.

  • Artist Statement 'I tend to view different eras and works of art history as the history of surfaces. There were...

    Artist Statement

     

    "I tend to view different eras and works of art history as the history of surfaces. There were periods when surfaces were merely materials to be covered and painted. Yet, even then, a significant painting was believed to possess its own unique surface—shaped by divine inspiration or the artist's vision. At other times, surfaces became central to the work. They were seen as a battleground, a terrain where past ideas clashed or a material object forged against earlier conventions.

     

    For me, my work no longer treats the surface as a mere vehicle for my personal concepts or as a material object to be shaped. I have come to realize, many times over, that the surfaces themselves draw me in. They have their own thoughts, actions, and vitality. They come alive. In the end, they take on the form of a kind of geographical collage. This collage might reflect the sudden growth of a towering tree, the rapid expansion of a new street, or even the unique gestures of the female form.

     

    In other cases, my surfaces take the shape of a map, one that physically adapts from the past into the near future. It might evoke the abrupt downfall of a rising city or vivid dreams. To emphasize the evolving nature of my work, I once referred to it as a "seed map." A map itself cannot change or grow, but my work exists in the active processes of adaptation and evolution. Ultimately, it becomes a living testament to the geographical form of the present."

     

    -- Ilhwa Kim

  • Ilhwa Kim's intricate compositions are made of tens of thousands of rolled, hand-dyed mulberry paper pieces. Using Hanji paper in...

    Ilhwa Kim's intricate compositions are made of tens of thousands of rolled, hand-dyed mulberry paper pieces. Using Hanji paper in greens, blues, pinks and yellows, she binds the paper into small rectangular forms. The artist considers these individual rolls or “seeds” microcosms within her larger cosmographies. 

  • Pushing back on the distinction between sculpture and painting, Kim creates compositions that hang together from a distance while pulling...

    Pushing back on the distinction between sculpture and painting, Kim creates compositions that hang together from a distance while pulling the viewer into their intricate topographical surface texture. These seeds are lodged tightly on the surface, pushing and pulling, creating tensions and stories beyond what a viewer might see at first glance.

  • Geographic Matter, Hand-dyed mulberry paper, 74 x 96 x 5 inches (Full diptych)
    Geographic Matter, Hand-dyed mulberry paper, 74 x 96 x 5 inches (Full diptych)
     
  • Kim’s work recalls the intricate ecosystems of coral reefs or kelp forests from aerial perspectives or the enigmatic stills of...

    Kim’s work recalls the intricate ecosystems of coral reefs or kelp forests from aerial perspectives or the enigmatic stills of microfauna seen under a microscope. Referring to the pieces as “living architecture” the artist captures subtle movement in her work, scenes that convey breath, breeze, and sway.

  • Territorial Matter, Hand-dyed mulberry paper, 52 x 65 x 5 inches
    Territorial Matter, Hand-dyed mulberry paper, 52 x 65 x 5 inches
  • “I create artworks that combine sculpture and painting in order to explore the richness, dynamism, and depth of sensory experience...
    “I create artworks that combine sculpture and painting in order to explore the richness, dynamism, and depth of sensory experience on canvas,” says Kim. “These layered, entangled, and ever-evolving sensory experiences, happening in a world defined by nature’s infinite possibilities, are what I strive to capture in my works.”