Installation view of 《사자굴  [Sajagul] — Then, out of the Den》 (Make Room, 2022) ©Joeun Kim Aatchim

Make Room Los Angeles is proud to present 《사자굴 [Sajagul]—Then, out of the Den》, a new project and series of paintings by New York-based artist Joeun Kim Aatchim. This is the first solo exhibition for the artist in the West Coast, spanning the gallery space and outdoor garden at Make Room Los Angeles in Hollywood. The opening reception will take place on April 16 from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m., and the exhibition will remain on view until June 4th.
 
In 《사자굴 [Sajagul]—Then, out of the Den》, Aatchim enters her own memory game. Her words 말 are her token 말 in this game, challenging the accuracy of her visual memory and pushes it to the limits until it breaks from reality and transforms into wild imagination. Through her drawings and painting, she visualizes the language. Aatchim extends both the concepts in the game and children’s’ understanding of them into various realms—the cinema, memory palace and collective memory, auditory and visual hallucination, psychosis, fantasy, exorcism, debts, Biblical allusion, Korean folktale and poetry, and rescue—as she describes in her own words:
 
“In 사자굴 Sajagul, which means lions’ den, I use translations of memories and languages as a pillar to structure the visual scenes. 사자 Saja—Korean for lion—is one of them:
 
한 사자가 집안을 어슬렁거렸다 can be translated into:
Saja (獅子 a lion) was roaming around the house.
A Saja (死者 the dead) was roaming around the house.


Joeun Kim Aatchim, Deliver her— Like a Thief in the Night. We Heard of Lions, Above a Herd of Pianos., 2022, Mineral & earth pigment suspended in glue, refined pine soot ink, indigo dye, charcoal, graphite, chalk, whitegold leaf on silk, 88.9x66x0.6cm ©Joeun Kim Aatchim

Then again, I translate the word to a nonlinear visual narrative with a specific scene in the movie ‘Jumanji’ (1995)—how a lion appears in the film; a tail sweeps and hammers down the dusty piano keys with noise, and the older sister Judy tells the younger one, ‘It’s not real, Peter. It’s a hallucination.’ This scene, which I played hundreds of times with my sisters, was a direct parallel to the time during my mother’s sudden absence and all the mysterious things around the time when we lived above a piano store.

Understanding the concept of a game helped [us] stay afloat during this episode, and of course, Hollywood’s happy ending means that things will go back to normal. To draw these incomprehensible, grim, and somewhat fantasy-like periods, I started drawing the space, from the architectural details to specific objects; then, I carefully summoned my family to the space with me (in the drawing) to review my memories and counter them.”


Joeun Kim Aatchim, Doubt The Hands (The Debt Collector Seeks the Father Through a Milk Delivery Hole), 2022, Mineral & earth pigment suspended in glue, refined pine soot ink, charcoal, graphite, chalk on silk, 88.9x127x3.2cm ©Joeun Kim Aatchim

《사자굴 [Sajagul]—Then, out of the Den》 finds itself enmeshed in Aatchim’s singular painting techniques. When drawing from multiple viewpoints with the intimacy of the subject—through her recall and the play on her memory of the space—she draws objects as if the object, figure, and space are transparent. The softness of the earth pigment and the crushed stone pigment grittiness inject texture into the visual effects of her stereoblindness and inability to distinguish depth.
 
Through these artistic elements and others, her in-depth material studies and experimentation are evident in this new series. Jumping in and out of traditional East Asian silk painting studies, she experiments with various textiles, organic pigments, and binding and sizing methods to ultimately construct double-layered paintings with two overlapping images.

To draw attention away from the transparent surface of silk to emphasize the innate transparency of her mark-making, Aatchim experiments with creating absorbent and opaque surfaces on linen for the first time, such as making her own waterborne ground with powdered silk and mica to paint on with casein and egg tempera, watercolor, and distemper that the artist mixes herself. Her attraction to water-based media stems from their capacity for transparent layering and her urgent desire to draw as many details as possible before she forgets.
 
For the final revision of the audio-visual essay 《사자굴 [Sajagul]—Then, out of the Den》, Aatchim stages the series of paintings, intaglio, texts, sounds, and objects at Make Room Los Angeles. Touching on themes of memory, language, and the psychology of children, 사자굴 [Sajagul] — Then, out of the Den finds Joeun Kim Aatchim working at the height of her powers.

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