Installation view of 《Collapsing, Colliding》 (PARKSEOBO FOUNDATION, 2025) ©PARKSEOBO FOUNDATION

Chansong Kim captures moments at the boundary where the solidity of existence becomes blurred and flexible. Filling her canvas—where identifiable places, garments, and even faces are obscured or expelled—is not so much a human body as a mass or amorphous substance of flesh.
 
Her practice began from a sense of estrangement she experienced upon encountering fragmented images of her own body during the process of taking photographs.(1) By translating photographs of her body into painting, Kim has continuously explored the distance and relationship between the observed body and the viewing subject (‘Uncanny Gap’ series). She has also expanded her work by addressing the position of the eternal outsider—such as plants that settle in foreign lands as invasive species, or landscapes glimpsed during walks through mist or over water—where boundaries are arbitrarily crossed yet never fully belong (‘Garden of Mistrust’ series).

Chansong Kim, Collapsing, Colliding, 2021, Oil on canvas, 112.1x162.2cm ©PARKSEOBO FOUNDATION

Composed of works from the PARKSEOBO FOUNDATION collection, 《Collapsing, Colliding》 focuses on the materiality of the body that Kim has long explored.(2) The anonymous skin filling the large canvases resembles oil paint mixed vigorously with a knife on a palette, or the rolling waves once visible from the artist’s studio window, or even the surface of a lake where fallen leaves gather and cling.
 
The carefully modulated oil paint accumulates layer upon layer, forming the very substance of the exposed skin. The weight of sunlight and air, the sensation of brushing wind, the trajectory of raindrops falling onto the body. Brushstrokes that leave rough traces atop thick paint or gently scatter pigment record what is left upon and flows across the body.

김찬송, 〈Skin and Green Shadow〉, 2023, 캔버스에 유채, 162x260cm ©박서보재단

At the boundary of bodies that collapse and collide, what the viewer encounters is a vivid afterimage of existence. Like the sculptures of Rodin that the artist would visit for comfort during difficult times in France,(3) the crushed and clustered organic surfaces carry a quiet trembling of the soul.
 
PARKSEOBO FOUNDATION invites audience to linger carefully within the subtle vibrations created by Kim’s material—the body at its threshold.
 

(1) Chansong Kim, ⌜Uncanny Gap⌟, artist website https://www.chansongkim.com/statement-uncanny-gap/
(2) The exhibition title 《Collapsing, Colliding》 is taken from Kim’s 2021 work of the same name.
(3) Chansong Kim Instagram post, October 1, 2018 https://www.instagram.com/p/BoZC-ARlhEX/?igsh=MTYyNW1mb2E4Yzdibw==

References