Heejae Lim, Stuffed Antelopes, 2022, Oil on canvas, 162.2x336.3cm, Installation view of 《Cabinet of Curiosity》 (LEE EUGEAN GALLERY, 2022) ©Heejae Lim

The exhibition 《Cabinet of Curiosity》 by artist Heejae Lim opens at LEE EUGEAN GALLERY. This is her third solo exhibition. The recurring subjects of her practice—“taxidermy” and “representation”—form the conceptual core.

Through a series of paintings depicting animal specimens displayed in natural history museums, she asks where the human desire to touch, possess, and affirm “aliveness” ultimately leads us, and whether such longing can ever be fulfilled. A “cabinet of curiosity” is a room of rare and peculiar objects.

Emerging in the 16th century, such rooms reflect humanity’s desire to collect valuable items—historical relics, artworks, and antiquities.

Installation view of 《Cabinet of Curiosity》 (LEE EUGEAN GALLERY, 2022) ©LEE EUGEAN GALLERY

In museums, taxidermied animals are fixed in dynamic poses within a fabricated natural environment. Between the viewer and the specimen lies a sheet of glass. In truth, the first thing our gaze touches is always that glass surface. Lim contemplates how to express this glass plane, the interior of the cabinet, and the specimen contained within it on the canvas.

As viewers pass by the cabinet, reflections and refractions appear on the glass depending on the movement of their gaze. To express this effect and the compressed, nearly flattened space, she creates flowing brushstrokes that trace the viewer’s eye movement. This drifting motion creates the illusion of horizontal expansion, giving the image an aquarium-like sense of speed.

The process resembles the weaving of a tapestry—large parts of her workflow involve wiping away paint with cloth or with her hands to create interwoven textures. The parabolic lines sweeping across the canvas, along with the gaze of the taxidermied animals, guide the viewer’s eyes like arrows and dynamically shift the pictorial space.

Installation view of 《Cabinet of Curiosity》 (LEE EUGEAN GALLERY, 2022) ©LEE EUGEAN GALLERY

The resulting woven field is an impression produced by the chance encounter of unrelated things: the taxidermy, the backdrop depicting a habitat, the supporting structures, and the images reflected in the glass. Through reproducing these impressions, she constructs her own new cabinet of curiosity.

Lim’s practice has long explored the relationship between the flat pictorial surface and the sense of movement proper to living beings. If her earlier solo exhibitions aimed to answer what kind of sensation she was depicting and how this expanding sensation progressed, this exhibition instead asks where the subject emerges and how it comes into being.

She has participated in group exhibitions at venues including Space K (2020), Galleries Droite & Gauche in Paris (2017), and Nook Gallery (2017), and has been selected as an emerging artist by the Uijeongbu Arts Center and the Ahnkook Foundation.

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