Study for Stuffed Herd in Diorama - K-ARTIST

Study for Stuffed Herd in Diorama

2025
Oil on canvas
72.7 x 72.7 cm
About The Work

Heejae Lim examines nature as an image already mediated through specimen-making and painting, locating within this process the painter’s own desire and dilemma rooted in the human impulse to grasp and possess living forms.
 
She focuses on taxidermied and immobilized life forms that, separated from their ecological and temporal contexts and placed behind glass, become fixed representations that nonetheless imply a residual sense of movement. Lim connects this erased time and space to contemporary desires surrounding imperfect images and the ownership of visual material.
 
In translating these subjects onto the flattened pictorial surface, she investigates the distortions and transformations that arise, revealing a paradoxical potential for fluidity and renewed vitality within images that appear immobilized. Through layered painterly processes, Lim exposes how nature is continually reprocessed through the visual language of painting and how the stillness of preserved animals can be reanimated into complex, multilayered images.
 
Her practice ultimately foregrounds the tensions between stillness and movement, representation and transformation, demonstrating how mediated images of nature acquire new forms of life through the act of painting itself.

Solo Exhibitions (Brief)

Heejae Lim has held solo exhibitions including 《Nesting》 (Onsu Gonggan, Seoul, 2023), 《Cabinet of Curiosity》 (LEE EUGEAN GALLERY, Seoul, 2022), 《Inflatable Paradise》 (Bambu Collection, Seoul, 2021), and 《Noli Me Tangere》 (Gallery DOS, Seoul, 2017).

Group Exhibitions (Brief)

Lim has also participated in numerous group exhibitions, including 《Amateur》 (Nook Gallery, Seoul, 2025), 《Perigee Winter Show 2024》 (Perigee Gallery, Seoul, 2024), 《The Vanishing Horizon: Episode.02》 (WWNN, Seoul, 2024), 《Arch of Experiences》 (Gallery In, Seoul, 2023), 《Expanded World》 (DrawingRoom, Seoul, 2020), and 《COCOON 2020》 (Space K, Gwacheon, 2020).

Awards (Selected)

Lim was selected as one of the ‘Chongkundang Yesuljisang 2025’.

Residencies (Selected)

Lim has participated as a resident artist at Suwon Art Studio PUREUNJIDAE CHANGJAK SAEMTEO (2025) and White Block Residency in Cheonan (2023–2025).

Works of Art

Human Desire and the Dilemma of Representation

Originality & Identity

Heejae Lim’s work begins with the question of how nature becomes processed into an image. As seen in early works such as HLN004 (2016) and MNK001 (2017), the artist focuses on nature presented through glass surfaces—television or documentary screens—in a taxidermied, objectified state. Though these images appear to capture the movement of living beings, they are in fact selected, edited, and staged by humans, revealing that our perception of nature is fundamentally situated within a manipulated frame. Lim discovers, in this gap, the desire to “touch and possess” nature, and the dilemma of representation that inevitably fails to satisfy this desire.

This line of inquiry becomes clearly articulated in her first solo exhibition, 《Noli Me Tangere》(Gallery DOS, 2017). Lim noted that scenes of predation and survival in documentaries seem to reveal the natural world, yet are in fact “a theatrical stage that has lost its sense of reality.” In other words, our view of nature is always mediated, transformed through the surfaces that frame it. Lim considers this mediating structure essential to understanding “nature as image.” The nature she depicts is never untouched or original; it always exists in a processed state.

In the 2022 solo exhibition 《Cabinet of Curiosity》(LEE EUGEAN GALLERY), this focus expands into the realm of “the desire to possess.” Taxidermied animal specimens may seem to preserve living creatures, but in reality, they are objects of possession premised on death. Works such as Stuffed Antelopes (2022) and Stuffed Chamois and Wild Sheep (2021–2022) reveal a state in which the boundaries between life and death, nature and artificiality, become entangled. Through these preserved bodies, the artist encourages viewers to reflect on how we structure and rearrange nature—and on the contradictory emotions arising from this process.

Her recent work Tree of Stuffed Humming birds (2024) expands this thematic inquiry toward the notion of “relationship.” Fifty-six hummingbirds, seven nests, and a branch shaped like a snake’s head exist as individual entities yet form a tightly interwoven relational network. As the artist states, “the most elusive and alive thing is relationship,” and such relational vitality moves beyond the representation of a single specimen, advancing toward a new concept of a pictorial ecosystem in which life, image, and relationship move together.

Style & Contents

Lim employs glass surfaces, reflected light, distorted perspective, and diffused forms to actively reveal the processed nature of natural imagery. In works such as HLN005 and MOB003, she intentionally blurs or breaks apart scenes from documentaries, releasing the viewer’s gaze from a predetermined narrative. This approach constructs a pictorial language that leaves an “impression” rather than a representation, allowing infinite imaginative readings of the scene.

In 《Cabinet of Curiosity》, her formal experimentation becomes more sophisticated. The reflections on glass, spatial compression, and refractions that occur as viewers move past cabinets containing taxidermied animals spread across the canvas like flowing currents. Through the repetitive gesture of applying and wiping paint, Lim builds the surface like a woven tapestry. In this process, disparate elements—specimen, background, reflections, glass frame—intermingle, transforming the canvas into a surface of complex visual experience that surpasses the reproduction of a singular subject.

In the 2023 solo exhibition 《Nesting》(Onsu Gonggan), the artist attempts a new expansion by extending the “frame” of the cabinet beyond the boundaries of the canvas. In particular, her installation work extracts the pictorial frame into the physical exhibition space, experimenting with how the image is once again “made visible” within a spatial environment. This challenges the fixed boundaries of painting and extends her ongoing inquiry into the structures of “seeing” and “being seen” into a three-dimensional dimension.

The new work Tree of Stuffed Humming birds demonstrates the most heightened transformation of her formal language. Whereas earlier works guided the image through relatively broad visual flows, this painting contains minute, simultaneous currents among hummingbirds, nests, branches, and background, filling the pictorial space densely. The color palette also becomes more fantastical, constructing a “sensory realism” that feels closer to nature despite its fictional composition. This shift reflects the artist’s expanding pictorial imagination, moving beyond conventional representation to reconstruct the vitality of the image itself.

Topography & Continuity

Heejae Lim is an artist who analyzes, through painting, the process by which nature is transformed into images. Rather than depicting nature itself, she investigates how nature becomes taxidermied, processed, and displayed through human desire, technology, and vision. This is evident in works such as Two Story (2019), which presents the loss of vitality found in preserved birds, and Faux SC&WS (2023), where the structure of painting-object-glass forms a relational image.

While her early practice focused primarily on analyzing the processed nature of documentary imagery, her work since the 2020s has evolved toward reconstructing taxidermy displays and their surrounding glass structures and spatial relationships through painting. In 《Nesting》, the frame of painting expands into physical space, and in the recent group exhibition 《The Vanishing Horizon Episode.02》(WWNN, 2024), her practice develops further into fictional constructions and relational ecosystems.

In her paintings, the elements of image, subject, relationship, frame, and viewer interact like components of a living system. This positions her work on a trajectory distinct from representational or naturalistic painting, redefining painting as an organic, relational field of perception.

Works of Art

Human Desire and the Dilemma of Representation

Articles

Exhibitions

Activities