Installation view of 《Archive of the Mind: Pacific Crossing》 (ATELIER AKI, 2025) ©ATELIER AKI

ATELIER AKI is pleased to present 《Archive of the Mind: Across the Pacific》, a solo exhibition by Seattle-based artist Hyunjeong Lim, on view from August 28 to October 4. Through the practice of intuitive drawing guided by spontaneous gestures and the flow of the unconscious, Lim translates emotions, memories, and imagined realms that, though unseen, are deeply perceived, into fantastical, otherworldly scenes. This exhibition presents 00 new works that invite viewers on a journey distilled through Lim’s intuitive drawing and distinct visual language, shaped by her lived experiences and inner transformations across Korea, the U.S. West Coast, and Europe.
 
Hyunjeong Lim’s work does not follow a linear or logical method of arranging and storing memories or experiences. Rather than presenting a complete narrative or singular interpretation, her compositions unfold as open, non-linear structures, fluid in nature and guided by the flow of memory, sensation, emotion, and dreams. The juxtaposition of living creatures, uncanny figures, and strange images drawn from everyday life may appear disconnected at first glance, yet within the work, they form invisible, organic connections and new systems of meaning.

This approach invites viewers to drift across the canvas rather than fixate on a single point, allowing them to discover their own connections and meanings through the rhythm and flow of their own perception. Notably, her recurring motifs of islands and oceans embody this duality of isolation and connection, stillness and movement. In the series, fragments of emotion and memory may appear to exist independently, but are in fact subtly intertwined like the deep, unseen currents of water, evoking in the viewer a recognition of similar patterns and connections within their own inner landscape.

 
"I visualize imagined inner landscapes through intuitive drawing, allowing images to emerge spontaneously as my hand moves. This process reflects my lived experiences and emotions, while also seeking to depict a fantastical, surreal world through painting."
/ 2025, Hyunjeong Lim 


Installation view of 《Archive of the Mind: Pacific Crossing》 (ATELIER AKI, 2025) ©ATELIER AKI

The exhibition title ‘Archive of the Mind’ reflects Lim’s ongoing practice of collecting and layering fragments of lived experience, emotional shifts, sensory impressions shaped by the cultural and psychological boundaries she has navigated since relocating to the West Coast of the United States in 2018. Her canvases act as a personal archive, a space where internal records of memory take visual form through her creative practice. While Lim's earlier cultural foundation was shaped by time spent in Korea, London, and Europe, her experiences in San Francisco and Seattle introduced a new range of influences.

The natural landscape, layered communities, and emotional tension between the familiar and the unfamiliar have become central to her evolving practice. In her 2020 solo exhibition 《Strangers in a Strange World》(2020, San Francisco), Lim explored the diverse environments of California and the complex emotions of being a foreigner through experimental visual forms. Following this, her 2025 solo exhibition Trip West (2025, Seattle), she drew inspiration from the vast and overwhelming landscapes of the American West’s national parks to construct an imagined space where real and internal landscapes converged.

Lim’s artistic exploration serves as both an homage to Northern Renaissance masters Hieronymus Bosch and Pieter Bruegel the Elder, and a visual experiment that brings together the dreamlike utopias of East Asian landscape painting with the vast wilderness of the American West. On her canvas, myth, reality, and personal narrative freely unfold in layered dialogue.
 
The subtitle ‘Across the Pacific’ is more than a reference to geographic movement or change. Inspired by the 2018 exhibition《Thomas Cole's Journey: Atlantic Crossings》 at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, it echoes the spirit of Thomas Cole, who emigrated from 19th-century Britain to America and redefined the aesthetics of American landscape painting by weaving together the expansive nature of the New World with the compositional principles of classic European art.

In addition, the vast scale of nature, shifting light and weather, and coastal imagery in her work are drawn from lived travel experiences, yet they also evoke a visual reinterpretation of the dreamlike ideals found in East Asian art, reflecting the spirit of Dream Journey to the Peach Blossom Land, where reality and fantasy fluidly coexist.


Hyunjeong Lim, Bryce Point, 2024, Acrylic, oil on canvas, 101.6x228.6cm (3 pieces) © ATELIER AKI

The exhibition 《Archive of the Mind: Across the Pacific》 does not present memory as a fixed or standardized repository, but instead reveals Hyunjeong Lim’s ever-shifting and expanding inner landscape. It explores the possibility of genuine dialogue through art at the intersection of life and art, reality and imagination, self and other.

The deeply personal images constructed on the canvas invite viewers to bring their own interpretations and emotions, transforming the work into a new kind of archive. In doing so, the exhibition suggests that despite cultural differences and unfamiliar inner worlds, meaningful connections can still emerge. Through this journey, viewers are invited to discover their own emotional topographies and internal shifts, experiencing the archive as a deeply personal and reflective space. 

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