Kim’s work
is grounded in metal as a primary material, yet it places greater emphasis on
the relationships and transformations that material generates rather than on
its inherent properties. He works with metals such as brass, silver, and iron
in the form of slender wires or thin sheets, bending and connecting them to
construct overall structures. This process goes beyond mere form-making,
revealing the ways in which disparate elements come together to achieve balance
and connection.
A key
aspect of this process is “movement” and “responsiveness.” His works are less
like fixed sculptures and more like structures that interact with their
surrounding environment. For instance, in 《Scenery of Ordinary Life》(KCDF Window
Gallery, 2021), the works subtly sway in response to air currents and
continuously produce shifting visual moments as they react to light. The
trembling and shimmering of metal lines extend beyond visual perception,
creating sensory experiences that verge on the auditory.
Another
important element in his work is “emptiness.” The spaces left between
structures are not mere voids but function as zones where immaterial elements
such as light, air, and time intervene. In 《Captured Moments》(Gallery Kabinett, 2022),
metal structures arranged within a frame present the flow of nature as a
“captured memory,” while simultaneously emphasizing the invisible movements
occurring within it.
In more
recent works, this formal language expands into more complex configurations. In
《Silent Entanglement》(Gallery
SoSo, 2025), the installation extends across the entire space, with metal
structures evoking trees or plants while maintaining an open form that does not
replicate specific shapes but instead accommodates external conditions. The
metal bends, crumples, and transforms over time, and the work remains in a
state of ongoing change rather than a completed form. In this way, Kim’s formal
language is continually renewed through the interplay of material, environment,
and time.