Installation view of 《Noli Me Tangere》 (Gallery DOS, 2017) ©Heejae Lim

[Artist Note]

The subjects I paint always stand unnecessarily behind glass. Standing on this side of that obstruction, we can never fully escape the position of the observer.

Thus, when an animal on television chases another breathlessly, we know with certainty that it is an unreachable landscape. Despite the overwhelming immersion of the screen, what we see resembles a stage play more than reality. Viewed from the safe distance of a tourist, even scenes of predation can appear romantic.

We expect nature to remain intact in itself. Yet what lies behind the reflected surface has been shaped too deliberately to be pure. This becomes clear even in wildlife documentaries, where predators and prey are assigned roles and wrapped in crafted narratives.


Heejae Lim, MNK001, 2017, Oil on canvas, 130.3x162.2cm ©Heejae Lim

What drew my attention was the by-product of this staged drama. The visual devices designed to induce immersion struck me more strongly than the narrative itself, prompting me to pull the images out of their contextual frame through painting. Unlike the fabricated frame of a TV screen, the canvas becomes a safety net where the image functions not as bait or mechanism but as an impression in its own right.

During the painting process, the forms of the subjects break apart and dissolve under the brush, becoming unidentifiable. Yet the image arrives more forcefully as a single impression. Meeting the physical form of paint and canvas, this impression neither operates as a lure nor seeks absorption; instead, it stands face-to-face with the viewer. At that boundary, we remain solitary, but I believe that very distance enables us to see what has previously escaped our sight.

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