Chung Suejin graduated from the Department of Painting at Hongik University (1992) and obtained a master’s degree from the School of Art Institute of Chicago (1995). She is currently working under an exclusive contract with the LEE EUGEAN Gallery.

Before Suejin Chung, square canvases—rarely used in painting—began
to appear frequently. Measuring 50x50 cm or 100x100 cm, these square formats
evoke geometry rather than a pictorial “window,” providing a certain unity to
whatever they contain. Rather than functioning as a window to look into
something, they resemble a chessboard or Go board—a strictly bounded field in
which a visual grammar is generated and transformed along invisible vertical
and horizontal axes.
In Chung’s work, like the relationship between necessity
and chance, there exists a paradoxical logic of freedom within strict
structure—an alien logic that generates diversity. As in her exhibition 《Brain Ocean》(2000) at
Sarubia Dabang, which I first saw, there is an ocean-like reality contained
within a small space like a walnut (the brain). What is called “free art” does
not mean that art is free in reality, but rather that within a limited time and
space, like a game, it allows for an infinite number of moves. Art is free
within a confined spatiotemporal frame, yet it can expand into another
dimension through analogy.
The artist is the one who must play skillfully within that
space—so much so that viewers might want to join in. Since 《Brain Ocean》, Chung’s
ever-flowing magical playground has been nothing short of astonishing. In the
Korean art scene, particularly among young artists absorbed in their “personal
worlds,” there are many paintings filled with swarming motifs and fragmented,
disjointed narratives. While Chung can be seen as a pioneer of this tendency,
the difference between her and others is significant.
Ultimately, the
distinction lies between a dissolution into repetitive, accidental particles
and a powerful form of chance that interacts with necessity. For the “emergence
of multidimensional beings” (the exhibition subtitle) to occur, intermittent
chance alone is insufficient—it must be supported by strong necessity. This
requires an affinity for more universal grammars such as mathematics, geometry,
or linguistics. For the artist, necessity arises from relentless study of
painting and the act of painting itself. The relationship between necessity and
chance is akin to that between consciousness and the unconscious.
For example, the artist finds it awkward to directly equate the
unconscious with chaos. According to Chung’s observation, “the unconscious
possesses a sophisticated logical system and operates according to that
system,” but consciousness mistakes it for chaos because it cannot comprehend
this logic. Just as the unconscious interacts with consciousness, the artist
has diligently woven a network of necessity in pursuit of sensory and
intellectual pleasure and insight.
As seen in her book [Budo Theory: A New Visual
Theory for Reading Multidimensional Consciousness], published alongside the
exhibition, Chung is a highly logical artist. Budo theory is described as “a
theory for visually perceiving logical systems of thought,” and its distinctive
feature is that it does not develop logic based on judgments of right and
wrong, but rather on sameness and difference. Here, “logic” does not refer to
dogmatic assertions or loosely assembled knowledge, but rather to a genuinely
original theory of visual perception.
What Chung calls “Budo” appears to be a kind of graphical symbol
representing multidimensional forms, and her paintings may be understood as the
products of this unique system of notation. Beyond the familiar
three-dimensional world lies a virtual dimension, and like a geometer, the
painter explores infinitely expanding patterns and polyhedra. The accompanying
text related to her paintings demonstrates how information can be transformed
from one form into another.
A meticulous researcher with a mathematical mind
might be able to analyze Chung’s complex paintings into their basic components
and convert them into simple visual codes or diagrams. One might even trace a
hidden path through which dimensions multiply. In both her paintings and
writings, one finds a coherence within a structured system reminiscent of those
who are obsessively immersed in a particular worldview. Beyond the question of
belief, every system of belief possesses its own internal logic and
consistency, much like scientific paradigms of a given era.

However, it is not necessary for viewers to read such a complex
book in order to understand her paintings. One cannot become Suejin Chung to
understand her visual logic. Viewers must approach the work from what is
externally visible. While there are works such as Surprised by the
Definitive Regulation of a Real Situation, the artist’s expression
moves outward from within, whereas viewers move inward from the outside.
It is
uncertain where these two directions will meet. Interestingly, although the book
is presented as an explanation of her paintings, it contains not a single
image. It appears less like a guidebook and more like another artwork written
in text. Visual logic and painting activate each other, but they do not
correspond one-to-one. There is a cluster of logic there and a cluster of
images here. Visual logic, like criticism, does not reproduce or translate a
given object into another language.
If it did, it would merely be tautology, rendering one side
unnecessary or incomplete. The two exist in parallel, in a relationship of
resonance rather than transcription. Like the relationship between words and
things, the mind and the hand can never fully become one. Reducing painting
either to abstract concepts or to mechanical labor devoid of thought is equally
meaningless. What interests us is that both the logic and the painting
originate from a single individual.
One might even suspect that the book serves
as a defense against the tiresome question of what her paintings mean—“It’s all
written there.” Of course, this does not mean the book contains no answers. It
points clearly to where answers may lie, but determining meaning is no easier
than reading the paintings themselves. Chung clearly indicates what is unclear.
Her paintings present concrete forms, yet resist narrative interpretation; like
the coexistence of detailed motifs and amorphous stains, both her work and
logic form a stage of paradox.
Consider the title of one of the exhibited works: A
Representation of a Real Situation with a Variable Indexical–Narrative
Structure, Embodied by the Face of a Girl from Page 14 of National Geographic,
January 2002, and the Various Inner Sensations Surrounding It,.
Although it appears highly “specific,” it does not guarantee meaning any more
clearly than the previously favored title Untitled—in this
exhibition, only one work bore that title, depicting a mask identical to the
face behind it floating in front.
The titles are so long that they provoke
laughter, yet even adding more lines would not change the situation. The title
contains both definite meanings such as “indexical–narrative structure” and
“representations,” as well as uncertain or variable elements like “variable,”
“situation,” and “various inner sensations.” The artist states that her work
consists of “64 formal units and 64 conceptual units.” If there are that many,
they can hardly remain elemental.
Systematizing these formal and conceptual units through group
theory resembles the methods of biologists, chemists, or mathematicians who
classify and quantify existence itself. The combinations of dozens of such
units would generate an enormous number of possibilities. Since the work is not
purely abstract, the method of combination is difficult to gauge. It would be
far more complex than the compositions of Mondrian, for example, which were
based on vertical/horizontal lines and primary colors.
The word most frequently
encountered in her texts—whether in book titles, exhibition titles, or artwork
titles—is “multidimensional.” Paintings featuring the “emergence of
multidimensional beings” are forms of “multidimensional geometry.” This
multidimensionality provides a logical reason for continuing to paint even in
the age of computers. In the era of the information revolution, painters must
have their own answer to why they paint, and that answer must possess
universality. The “self,” which many painters rely upon, is not sufficient. Nor
is “painting for painting’s sake.” The subject and painting are not at the
beginning of artistic pursuit but at its end.
Chung compares humans to computers. While similar, they are also
fundamentally different. Painting is an open system carried out by humans—more
intuitive than computers, which operate as mechanical algorithms governed by
closed forms. Multidimensionality is reborn as rich intuitive imagery. The
concept of “manifold,” introduced by mathematician Riemann, turns “the diverse”
into a concrete entity determined by multiple factors. The amorphous stains and
traces appearing in Chung’s work in recent years suggest that such manifolds
are not only geometric but also related to complex flows like turbulence.
The
geometric metaphors implied by “multidimensionality” are abundant. Impossible
forms and organisms appear, and polyhedra are animated with lifelike qualities.
The brain, often symbolized by walnuts in her paintings, evokes the unseen
world and dimensions. Like the onion in earlier works—symbolizing an endless
hermeneutic loop—the brain, folding infinite layers within a finite space,
becomes a powerful metaphor for painting itself.
As Hamlet famously states, “I could be bounded in a nutshell and
count myself a king of infinite space,” a metaphor often associated with the
brain’s capacity for spatial imagination. In Chung’s work, geometry is flexible
enough to appear in cartoon characters or holes in bread. The stains and traces
that disrupt otherwise ordered compositions evoke sequences, proliferation, and
the processes of emergence and disappearance. For change to occur, as ancient
atomists argued, the concept of the void is essential.
Many of her works
reference “emptiness (空),” such as The
Emergence of a Face Produced by the Conceptual Definition of Emptiness.
In works like An Analytical Dialogue on the Void Occurring in a
Multidimensional Poetic-Pictorial Space, holes appear in the canvas,
revealing blank white spaces behind. Emptiness here signifies not mere absence,
but the potential for transformation.

When combined with figures such as thinkers or heads, this
emptiness appears as an ever-changing (un)conscious flow emanating from within
the figure. It introduces latent movement into the static medium of painting.
Works that involve repetition or self-referential structures demonstrate that
multidimensional painting is unrelated to representation. Like mathematics,
painting is produced through internal logic as an abstract and symbolic
structure.
Structure is often regarded as reality. Painting and imagination
refuse to remain mere intellectual play. Multidimensionality in art can be
linked to experimentation. James Joyce, frequently referenced in her titles, is
known for connecting stream of consciousness with linguistic experimentation.
Works with “multidimensional” in the title often feature strange, human-like
forms composed of geometric patterns, along with discontinuous compositions
suggesting portals to other dimensions.
Each dimension contains different forms of existence, yet they
coexist without contradiction on a single canvas. Chung’s work does not rely on
a single geometry but multiple geometries, each following its own logic. As
Siobhan Roberts notes in [King of Infinite Space], “there are many geometries,
each describing a different world like those in fairy tales or utopias.” These
are “places radically different from the world we inhabit.”
In Chung’s work,
strange transformations and proliferations unfold in series, as seen in Pure
Beverages That Convey the Concept of Emptiness. Like topologists, her
work suggests forms that retain their properties despite stretching, twisting,
or compressing. Polyhedra appear in topologically equivalent relationships,
like cubes and spheres. Rather than expressing this through equations, her work
manifests as rich intuitive imagery.
Chung’s work can be seen as an extensive metaphor for a world
different from the present one. Such “multidimensionality” extends beyond the
domain of geometers. Like Coxeter, who emphasized that mathematics should be
learned like swimming or cycling, her work suggests a similar experiential
approach.
Even simple elements such as breakfast toast or a skipping girl
contain multidimensional geometry. Like Kepler or Newton, who sought to
understand the structure of the universe, Chung explores painting with a quasi-scientific
passion. While her work studies form like geometry, it does not simply
translate geometry into images. Painting becomes a field for dimensional
analogy.
The word “emergence” in her exhibition subtitle introduces time as
a fourth dimension into ordinary coordinates. In dealing with
higher-dimensional spaces, spatial metaphors are crucial. As noted in [King of
Infinite Space], higher dimensions can represent any measurable
characteristic—temperature, wind direction, interest rates, age, and so on.
These attributes can be endlessly extended. But to what end? Coxeter suggests
that the goal remains aesthetic, much like the Pythagoreans’ search for cosmic
harmony.
Coxeter stated, “The mathematician, like the painter or poet, is a
maker of patterns. The mathematician’s patterns must be beautiful, like those
of the artist or poet.” Beauty is the primary criterion. Ugly mathematics has
no place in the world. Some devote themselves to such pursuits without
immediate utility.
Painters belong to this group. Their journey toward beauty
transcends social or material concerns. They are, as Roberts describes,
“recluses inhabiting their own minds.” The worlds they explore are filled with
delightful enigmas distinct from chaotic reality. This is why Suejin Chung’s
complexity is, in fact, joyful.
Source: MMCA Webzine ART;MU