Installation view of 《Record of Fragments》 © Sungkok Art Museum

Sungkok Art Museum operates the “Sungkok Open Call” exhibition program to discover and support young artists and curators of outstanding potential. The program aims to identify emerging artists engaged in original creative practices and to provide them with opportunities to exhibit their work within the museum by offering its space free of charge. The initiative serves as a stepping stone for their future artistic careers.

In 2022, two exhibitions were selected through the “Sungkok 2022 Open Call,” with the first being Jungin Kim’s solo exhibition 《Record of Fragments》.

This exhibition presents around twenty paintings created by Kim over the past three years. Having just passed her early thirties, Kim has consistently devoted herself to painting, continuing her practice amid the dazzling, complex era of high-tech imagery.

His persistence in painting stems from her desire to slowly savor and externalize the deep, internal impulse for creation—an impulse that resists the rapidly accelerating currents of contemporary life.


Installation view of 《Record of Fragments》 © Sungkok Art Museum

Kim seems to wish to be both a “painter” and a “poet.” She captures scenes from everyday life through the lens of his gaze and reconstructs them in his own language. In doing so, his perspective embraces other spaces and times, intertwining, dissolving, and fragmenting them.

His paintings, therefore, are composed of poetic titles that are often ambiguous or resistant to easy interpretation—such as A Stone Filled with Anxiety, The Road to the Tree, and A Star Made by Debris. Likewise, his imagery focuses on depicting unstable situations still in the process of formation. Through gestural brushstrokes that dissolve, overlap, and repeat, Kim merges and reattaches images, completing his paintings through cycles of blending and reassembly.

Images in which the inside and outside, front and back, intertwine appear as if they carry traces of both past memories and future visions. They resemble spaces one might have once seen or wish to experience—spaces embodying a desire for unity and belonging.

The faintly bleached, mid-tone colors dominate the entire canvas, sustaining one another within their subtle tonal variations. Within these hues, Kim’s gaze gestures toward an artistic horizon that embraces the past, the present, and the future at once, inviting the viewer to share in that perspective.

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