Hong’s
paintings visualize the fragmentation of perception through geometric
composition and the juxtaposition of heterogeneous objects. Early on, she
frequently depicted everyday mechanical devices such as electric fans, water
tanks, and stadium floor lines. To the artist, these resembled the mechanisms
of her hearing aids—objects that fall silent when disconnected from power,
recalling the moments when her own hearing ceased. Works like 〈Stadium〉(2019) and the installation 〈Tip of the Needle〉(2019) use such motifs to
reveal the disconnection, reconstruction, and opacity inherent to sensory
experience and language.
In 《Hidden Languages》, these sensory mechanisms
evolve into a more advanced painterly experiment. The canvases intertwine
industrial objects from the Euljiro district with abstract shapes and imagined
fragments, where straight and curved lines, planes and volumes, and color
fields and geometric forms coexist without merging into a single image. By
layering or cutting photographs and printed images, Hong arranges fragments of
reality into what she calls a “sensory montage.” Works such as 〈Noise〉(2021), 〈Large
and Small Lines〉(2021), and 〈How
to Water a Tree〉(2021) exemplify this hybrid
compositional approach.
Later, the
artist translates the evolving sensory experiences brought by technological
advances in hearing devices into the compositional principles of painting. In
the series ‘Landscape of Shapes’(2021), she intentionally omits the
individuality of objects, reducing them to simplified lines and forms, and interprets
the blank spaces as “folds” or “wrinkles.” Here, absence is no longer a void
but a generative space where overlapping sensations give rise to new visual
languages.
Her recent
paintings move toward emphasizing flatness and spontaneity. Through image
collage, scraping, and layered textures, Hong achieves a sense of
improvisational structure and constructs what can be described as visual “sound
layers.” Works such as 〈Circling Line〉(2023) and 〈Triangular Wave〉(2024) translate the vibration of sound and the rhythm of perception
into painterly form.