Installation view of 《To Bloom》 © The Page Gallery

The Page Gallery presents the group exhibition 《To Bloom》 from April 4 to May 2, featuring sixteen emerging artists from Korea and abroad who are receiving international attention.


Installation view of 《To Bloom》 © The Page Gallery

This exhibition begins with Lois Lowry’s novel Gathering Blue and celebrates the journeys of artists who challenge conventions, expand the possibilities of expression, and cultivate their own unique voices within rapidly changing socio-cultural conditions. The protagonist of Gathering Blue, Kira, realizes that blue dye has disappeared in a dystopian world in crisis and sets out to search for it.

In Kira’s story—where she uncovers the dark secrets of the world and moves forward for the sake of future generations—the process of making pigment involves boiling dyes to deepen and enrich color, allowing the color to fully develop, completing the blue dye, and then letting it permeate the fabric. Kira’s journey in search of the perfect blue pigment resembles the journey of artists searching for a visual language that can richly and vividly reflect their own stories.

The sixteen artists participating in the exhibition, each from diverse cultural and geographic backgrounds, create collages of visual landscapes where religious, cultural, and political boundaries intersect, using multilayered identities as their dyes. Moving across the spectrum between diaspora and cosmopolitanism, they explore cultural assimilation and alienation, inner memories and trauma, the repression and resistance of sexuality, visual languages of tradition and the future, and spiritual and cosmic connections.


Installation view of 《To Bloom》 © The Page Gallery

Anthony Akinbola, Dominique Fung, Joeun Kim Aatchim, Maia Ruth Lee, and Yesiyu Zhao reflect on diasporic lives, presenting self-reflective explorations of cultural alienation and migrant identity. Gabriel Mills, Laure Mary, and Vio Choe contemplate the cosmic connection between the self and the world, presenting reflective inquiries into human existence through spiritual sensibilities. Arghavan Khosravi, Cindy Ji Hye Kim, Hyegyeong Choi, and Sarah Lee express social injustices toward marginalized communities through surreal imagery and relief works composed of overlapping viewpoints.

Meanwhile, Anastasia Komar, Antonia Kuo, Mimi Jung, and Sung Hwa Kim explore aesthetic forms of the past and the future, reinterpreting the traditional legacy of beauty and experimenting with materials rarely used in painting to search for a visual language of the future.


This exhibition is both a tribute and a celebration of the process through which sixteen artists from different cultural backgrounds and experiences explore and establish their own distinctive visual languages. Through diverse artistic approaches, they dismantle social boundaries, connect the past and the present, tradition and the future, and suggest new possibilities. Like Kira, who sets out in search of blue dye, the participating artists create their own colors, and through this process ultimately allow their artistic individuality to bloom.

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