Heoang Kim (b. 1989) envisions future humanity preparing for the apocalypse through a fundamentally pessimistic perspective. Drawing on the visual worlds of 1990s Korean and Japanese games and comics, Kim’s practice began with explorations of motherhood and femininity, and has since expanded toward attempts to reconsider and reposition the excessively enlarged role of humanity in the wake of the Anthropocene.


Installation view of 《BAD ENDING-An evening when something ominous could happen-》 (Archive Bomm, 2015) © Heoang Kim

Heoang Kim’s work begins with anxieties, fears, and delusions about a future that may never arrive, as well as the real-life triggers that disrupt those imaginings. She constructs narratives from the unavoidable encounters of everyday life—people and events that she inevitably comes across.
 
For example, in her first solo exhibition, 《BAD ENDING – An Evening When Something Ominous Could Happen-》 at Archive Bomm in 2015, Kim captured her uneasy gaze upon chaotic protest scenes, shaped by the anxiety that the world might soon come to an end.


Installation view of 《BAD ENDING-An evening when something ominous could happen-》 (Archive Bomm, 2015) © Heoang Kim

Heoang Kim’s narratives, woven from scenes and figures encountered on the street, consisted of a total of eighty drawings. The characters that appear throughout these stories are often portrayed as weary and disillusioned by the monotony of everyday life. They attempt something new or move toward a different way of living with the help of others, only to eventually find themselves returning to where they began.
 
The situations, events, and symbols that structure these narratives function both as the artist’s questions about the world we inhabit and as the answers she arrives at herself. In her artist statement, Kim writes:
 
“Even while thinking that, in the end, nothing will work out, the protagonist of the story still weaves nets and sharpens knives, anticipating whether the ending she imagined will truly arrive. Of course, whether things turn out well or not, both are merely futures that have already been foreseen.”


Installation view of 《mama do》 (Keep in Touch, 2020) © Heoang Kim

Meanwhile, in her 2020 solo exhibition 《mama do》 at Keep in Touch, Heoang Kim reflected on her lived experiences and emotions surrounding pregnancy, childbirth, and motherhood.
 
The works presented throughout the exhibition depicted the everyday realities of childcare through an offbeat sense of humor and wit, while simultaneously evoking something instinctual and almost manic.


Installation view of 《mama do》 (Keep in Touch, 2020) © Heoang Kim

For instance, her paintings depict scenes such as a woman wearing a stretched-out T-shirt and with thinning patches of hair, smiling even as her head flies off, or a figure trapped inside a game console endlessly cleaning up toys scattered by a child. These chaotic situations are rendered in bright colors and a cheerful, cartoon-like visual style.


Installation view of 《mama do》 (Keep in Touch, 2020) © Heoang Kim

In other paintings, Heoang Kim portrays herself as a liquid-like figure melting and flowing while pushing a stroller. In fact, Kim has described childcare as something that feels “liquid.”
 
The everyday realities of parenting—bodily fluids such as a child’s saliva or excrement, a mother’s breast milk, a runny nose from catching a cold, sweat-soaked baby hair, and a mother’s drooping T-shirt—are always damp, sticky, or dripping.
 
In this way, “becoming a mother” in Kim’s work is never idealized through optimism, positivity, or hope. Instead, the artist bears witness to the messy and chaotic nature of daily life itself, presenting it almost like a joke through humor and satire.


Heoang Kim At Ob/Gyn, 2021, Oil on canvas, 97x162cm © Heoang Kim

While Heoang Kim reveals, through a self-deprecating sense of humor reminiscent of black comedy, the exhaustion and fatigue that emerge from the endless repetition of housework and caregiving labor, the children in her paintings are always depicted with confidence and composure.
 
It is only the adults who appear perpetually worn out and distressed; the children, by contrast, gaze firmly at the world with unwavering eyes, like players who know exactly what their objective is.


Installation view of 《Furry Ways》 (Mihakgwan, 2022) © Heoang Kim

Meanwhile, 《Furry Ways》, a solo exhibition held at Mihakgwan in 2022, began with Heoang Kim’s experience of losing a longtime companion dog.
 
The exhibition unfolded through imaginings of the world that her pet may have arrived at after crossing the “Rainbow Bridge.” This new world was constructed through the artist’s memories of an old video game that once evoked nostalgia for a place that never actually existed.


Installation view of 《Furry Ways》 (Mihakgwan, 2022) © Heoang Kim

Heoang Kim places super-deformed, childlike player characters into her paintings. These players are depicted exploring this newly imagined world.
 
They observe and study their surroundings, yet they neither defeat monsters nor plunder anything. Instead, the players simply wander and explore, gradually growing through the sensations and experiences they encounter along the way.


Installation view of 《Please save my earth》 (Space Willing N Dealing, 2023) © Heoang Kim

Furthermore, in the 2023 solo exhibition 《Please save my earth》 at Space Willing N Dealing, Heoang Kim presented an imaginative and metaphorical depiction of the world as seen through her own somewhat negative perspective as an adult and the future image of the world seen by the girls representing her daughter's generation.
 
The exhibition title reflects the artist’s hope that her daughter’s generation, now beginning to grow beyond early childhood into girlhood, might be able to properly exist within the vast world of Earth. The figures depicted in the paintings are projections of the artist herself, while at the same time embodying the resilient appearance of the next generation, standing tall and determined.


Installation view of 《Please save my earth》 (Space Willing N Dealing, 2023) © Heoang Kim

In this exhibition, Heoang Kim reveals anxieties about a dark future through images of winged creatures falling from the sky in the work Flowers (2023), while at the same time leaving traces of hope through the other works presented alongside it.
 
The world that these two generations—each looking toward different things and moving in different directions—will come to face is symbolically expressed in works such as Dear Evening (2023) and The Summit (2023), which depict scenes resembling twilight or the break of dawn.
 
In addition, adults appear in the form of an octopus beneath the sea, as in The Octopus Girl (2023), while the girls are portrayed with wings, as in the ‘The Giant’ series, or positioned atop mountains, as in Deep Dreams We Shared (2023).


Installation view of 《Please save my earth》 (Space Willing N Dealing, 2023) © Heoang Kim

Moreover, actions such as blowing bubble gum or building sandcastles, which appear throughout these works, symbolize acts that are seemingly useless yet infinitely full of possibility. In this way, the girls in Heoang Kim’s paintings move toward a different horizon from the artist—and the adults—who still believe in a “bad ending.”


Installation view of 《Dear morning》 (Space Willing N Dealing, 2025) © Heoang Kim

Following her 2023 solo exhibition 《Please save my earth》, which imagined a bleak future while projecting onto it the perspective of her daughter—who envisions the future differently from herself—her 2025 solo exhibition 《Dear morning》 reveals the artist’s pursuit of another direction.
 
The title “Dear morning” refers to a greeting offered to the morning after a long, dark night, embodying the artist’s narrative of renewed hope.


Installation view of 《Dear morning》 (Space Willing N Dealing, 2025) © Heoang Kim

Living in a home surrounded by mountains, the artist frequently encounters unexpected insects as part of her daily life. Upon learning that many of these are beneficial species, she resolved to coexist with them, reimagining them as main characters in her paintings.
 
Once perceived with aversion, these insects are transformed into charming, anthropomorphic figures. Meanwhile, the vague sense of anxiety about the future takes the form of steadfast “rock” characters who advance by conquering game levels, gradually achieving a sense of accomplishment. Their journey is presented as an imaginative transformation of crisis and anxiety into a stage for challenge.
 
《Dear morning》 embodies her intention to convert these anxieties and crises into circuits of positivity and hope. Through bold, dynamic brushstrokes, Kim captures the tactile qualities of paint, while her signature humor and fairy-tale imagination unfold across the canvas. The exhibition space was filled with vibrant, lively colors, like a stage set for her whimsical characters.


Heoang Kim, The Explorer, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 100x30cm © Heoang Kim

As a mother, Heoang Kim reflects on a world where human sensitivity and ethical sensibilities are eroding, and where the conveniences of civilization bring environmental destruction and climate crisis. She seeks the possibility of coexistence between the energy of the next generation and the beings that already inhabit the world.
 
Within these painted worlds emerges a new form of humanity—pluralistic and boundaryless, existing beyond anthropocentrism.
 
At the same time, Heoang Kim’s work reflects not only pessimism and anxiety about the future, as well as the confusion of contemporary reality, but also a persistent desire and determination to move toward a better future “despite everything.”

“Within the rhythm created by repetition and by things that do not change, I sense a force that propels me toward a new future. In a world after humanity, I hope that the human will appear in an entirely different form.” (Heoang Kim, Artist’s Note)


Artist Heoang Kim © Heoang Kim. Photo: Yang Ian.

Heoang Kim graduated from the Department of Painting at Hongik University and received an MFA in Painting from the same institution. Her solo exhibitions include 《Dear morning》 (Space Willing N Dealing, Seoul, 2025), 《Please save my earth》 (Space Willing N Dealing, Seoul, 2023), 《Furry Ways》 (Mihakgwan, Seoul, 2022), and 《Eat and Drink: I love myself, but I hate myself》 (Instant Roof, Seoul, 2021), among others.
 
She has also participated in numerous group exhibitions, including 《Mothering Fluid》 (Amado Art Space, Seoul, 2026), 《Unknown workout ground》 (Factory2, Seoul, 2025), 《Milky Way》 (Noon Contemporary, Seoul, 2024), 《We are gradually getting closer》 (Zaha Museum, Seoul, 2024), 《New Life》 (Space Willing N Dealing, Seoul, 2022), and 《Ha-ha-ha haus》 (Suwon Museum of Art, Suwon, 2021).
 
Kim’s works are included in the collection of institutions such as the Gyeonggi Children's Museum.

References