Installation view of 《Border of Skin》 (Mimesis Art Museum, 2023) ©Chansong Kim

Mimesis Art Museum presents 《MIMESIS SE 17 Border of Skin》. This exhibition focuses on the boundary of the body and the canvas surface as skin. By depicting landscapes upon flesh, Kim speaks of wandering surfaces. Gazes hovering above the skin remain on the surface or pass through it. External stimuli that penetrate influence the skin—the boundary—and the canvas surface, while the artist’s gaze hovering over the surface manifests as the materiality of paint seeping from exterior to interior.

The slipping and mixing forms of paint express both separation and fusion, addressing boundaries that grow thinner. Floating within the museum space, fragments of Kim’s body and landscape confront viewers with surfaces that fracture and intermingle.

Installation view of 《Border of Skin》 (Mimesis Art Museum, 2023) ©Chansong Kim

Floating Boundaries

By invoking boundaries, Kim refuses to close them. Her works are like poems that define nothing. Her traces within paint—soft yet decisive as it blends—recall the artist positioned between an indistinguishable inside and outside. Having realized that plants inhabiting French gardens and Moroccan landscapes were in fact species from elsewhere, she came to feel that intervention allows something new to arrive, blur what existed, and generate new boundaries. These unfamiliar interventions are often living beings, linking one thing to another, creating confusion, and restructuring relationships.

Feet, a recurring motif in her work, seem to wander through this confusion, measuring distance. Enlarged depictions of eyes, hands, feet, and bodies foreground emotions inseparable from the body. These works, which resemble bodily landscapes, capture processes through which change settles via intervention, prompting reflection on the body as a passageway. The same holds true for paintings that incorporate elements of nature identified with the body. Attention is given to stimuli and responses exchanged within relationships, and to the sensations and emotions that arise when something unfamiliar approaches. Ultimately, Kim’s floating surfaces suggest that each of us, as passageways, exists as a boundary.


— Heera Jung, Senior Curator, Mimesis Art Museum

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