Installation view of 《A Beautiful Mind》 (Art Delight Gallery, 2021) ©Art Delight Gallery

1. The Beauty of System

Seoul Kim (b. 1988)’s canvases are structured by rules and constraints that he establishes himself. In place of the free-spirited temperament often associated with artists, his work embodies the precision and rigor more commonly demanded in scientific or mathematical research. Through a meticulously constructed system—like a finely engineered automatic watch or carefully crafted solid wood furniture—the viewer encounters beauty.

 
2. Construction Without Reference

Seoul Kim studies a wide range of fields, from art history to design and architecture. After absorbing them all, he sets them aside and constructs his paintings using the pure materials of brush and paint. As architect Louis Kahn (1901–1974) stated, “Every material has a desire to be something.” His paintings demand not knowledge for interpretation, but eyes capable of discovering something.

Installation view of 《A Beautiful Mind》 (Art Delight Gallery, 2021) ©Art Delight Gallery

3. The Inside and Outside of the Stroke

In Kim’s ‘Filbert Family’ series, the oval shapes formed when a filbert brush meets the canvas are connected horizontally, vertically, and diagonally, generating combinations of strokes. The brush shape that defines the beginning and end of each stroke, together with the surrounding background, reveals forms such as arches, crescents, and stars as the viewer shifts perspective. In doing so, the works allow viewers to discover beautiful forms within both the intentional and unintentional interior and exterior of the stroke.

 
4. Planning, Discipline, and Painting as Critique

Kim’s painting constitutes a serious critique of the fundamental elements and conditions of painting itself. The insights he has gleaned from surveying the history of visual art—from classical to contemporary—are reorganized into blueprints for painting. These works are completed not through spontaneous expression but through sustained discipline. His paintings thus signify the painter’s plan itself: an investigation into the contexts of painting tools such as brush, paint, canvas, and frame.

 
5. Small Planes for Expansion into Three Dimensions

The small canvases in the ‘Filbert Family’ series feature three-dimensional frames. Reflecting the colors and forms of the internal composition, the frames repeat the structure of the painting and, at times, incorporate reflective materials that shift the axis of the canvas’s side surface. The two-dimensional compositional principles of the painting thus become three-dimensional through altered axes. This suggests that his works may be understood as sculptural models—blueprints for objects, furniture, or architecture, and even as grid systems for cities.

Seoul Kim, Filbert Family No.9, 2020, Oil, Cotton dyde canvas (medium texture), 172x172cm ©Seoul Kim

6. The Painter’s Mind (Beautiful Mind)

The surface of Seoul Kim’s painting is the result of a comprehensive analysis of tools, materials, and techniques for painting—from past to present. His works can be interpreted as evolved surface constructions, akin to the experiments of contemporary architects. They are outcomes attainable only through continuous research at the intersection of art, architecture, and design, and they realize what past artistic spirits once envisioned.

Compared to artists of the present day, this seemingly anachronistic painter may appear excessively slow and humble. Yet he believes sincerely in painting alone, pouring all his passion into forms that will harden within the mold of the past. His work traces a journey beyond surface graphics toward the structures of objects such as furniture, toward architectural plans and elevations, and toward complex systems like the intersections of a city.
 

Text by Jeong Hyeon

References