Joeun Kim Aatchim occupies a distinctive position within
contemporary painting through her approach to autobiographical memory. While
many artists address personal narratives through representational imagery,
Aatchim focuses on the structural formation of memory itself. The transparency
and layering of silk allow different moments, emotions, and spatial
relationships to coexist within a single pictorial field. Rooted in materials
historically associated with Korean painting yet articulated through contemporary
compositional strategies, her work forms a hybrid visual language that moves
between tradition and experimental painting.
Over time, the thematic scope of her practice has gradually
expanded. Early works centered on intimate family memories, particularly those
connected to her mother and childhood experiences. Later projects introduced
linguistic play and imaginative reinterpretation, while recent works
increasingly explore themes of vulnerability, care, and bodily experience. This
development can be traced through the sequence of exhibitions from 《eye jailed eye》 to 《사자굴 [Sajagul]—Then, out of the Den》 and
ultimately 《최소침습》, each stage widening the conceptual
range of the work.
Alongside these thematic developments, Aatchim’s international
presence has steadily grown. Her solo exhibitions include 《Sheer Painer》(François Ghebaly, Los Angeles,
2023) and 《Old Habit Theater》(Travesía
Cuatro, Guadalajara, 2024), while group exhibitions such as 《Durian On The Skin》(François Ghebaly, Los
Angeles, 2022), 《The Land of Exile》(Aranya Art Center, Beidaihe, 2023), and 《And
the Moon Be Still as Bright》(Harpers Chelsea, New York,
2023) situate her practice within broader global conversations. Through these
contexts, her work continues to engage with contemporary discourses surrounding
memory, identity, and perception.
Ultimately, Aatchim’s paintings propose a visual language for the
complexity of memory and emotion. The layered silk surfaces create spaces where
past and present, reality and imagination intersect. While rooted in personal
experience, these works gradually extend outward, inviting viewers to encounter
their own memories within the subtle, shifting atmospheres of her images.