Jeong, 정(正) - K-ARTIST

Jeong, 정(正)

2025
Acrylic and pigments on wood frame for canvas
155.8 x 154.6 x 5.8 cm
About The Work

Ahra Kim has developed a practice that moves across the boundaries of architecture, sculpture, and painting, exploring new formal languages at their intersection. In particular, she has focused on the structural aesthetics of traditional Korean architecture and interprets them through abstraction. 

By dismantling and reconfiguring the structures of traditional architecture, her work reflects on the relationship between two- and three-dimensional forms, as well as the inside and outside of painting, while continuing to experiment along the boundary between tradition and the contemporary.

In Ahra Kim’s work, the canvas frame—one of the primary elements of her practice—is regarded not merely as a support for holding an image but as a physical and independent formal element. Ahra Kim drew a parallel between the structure of the wooden canvas frame—assembled by carving grooves and fitting the pieces together—and the joinery techniques of traditional Korean architecture, in which wooden pillars and beams are carefully carved and interlocked to construct a structural framework.

Beginning with her interest in the tension and balance found in the structures of traditional architecture, as well as the constructive logic created by the grain of wood, Kim’s artistic practice has moved beyond simply reconfiguring traditional elements and forms within a contemporary context. Instead, it has expanded into the spatial dimension, exploring how perception emerges in the relationships between work, space, and viewer.

Solo Exhibitions (Brief)

Ahra Kim has held solo exhibitions including 《Even a Single Day is Long, If You Try to Understand》 (Kimreeaa Gallery, Seoul, 2026), 《Window》 (Soyang Gotaek, Wanju, 2022), 《Overpass》 (Gallery2, Seoul, 2022), and 《Intersecting Moment》 (Gallery Kang Ho, Seoul, 2021).

Group Exhibitions (Brief)

Kim has also participated in numerous group exhibitions, including 《UNBOXING PROJECT 6: Reading》 (New Spring Project, Seoul, 2025), 《Deep into Abstraction-On the Way》 (Seoul National University Museum of Art, Seoul, 2025), 《Wondersquare》 (Museumhead, Seoul, 2025), 《Home and Painting·》 (House Gallery, Seoul, 2024), 《The Moving Story in Autumn Breeze》 (Hwaseong Temporary Palace, Yuyeotaek (維與宅), Suwon, 2023), and 《UNBOXING PROJECT 2: Portable Gallery》 (New Spring Project, Seoul, 2021).

Awards (Selected)

Kim was recently selected as a semi-finalist for the 2025 Kiaf HIGHLIGHTS.

Collections (Selected)

Kim’s works are held in the collections of the Seoul National University Museum of Art, Gyeonggi Museum of Modern Art, and the Embassy/Permanent Mission of the Republic of Korea in Austria.

Works of Art

Three-Dimensional Forms, Planes, and Space in Shared Breath

Originality & Identity

Ahra Kim’s practice begins with a critical inquiry into the “frame” of painting. As seen in the early ‘Set’(2015–) series, she regards the canvas not as a mere support for images but as an independent structure in itself. In works leading up to 《Intersecting Moment》(Gallery Kang Ho, Seoul, 2021), she juxtaposes the joinery techniques of traditional Korean architecture with the structure of the canvas frame, forming an approach that simultaneously considers the inside and outside of painting.
 
This line of inquiry becomes more explicit in 《Overpass》(Gallery2, Seoul, 2022). During this period, the artist moves beyond borrowing structural elements of traditional architecture as simple motifs, instead expanding them into formal principles that organize the entire exhibition space. Elements such as windows, columns, and brackets no longer function as objects of representation but as structural devices that simultaneously construct painting and space. Here, painting no longer remains confined to the plane but shifts into a structure experienced within space.
 
Her work gradually shifts its focus from “structure” to “relationship.” In 《The Result Show of Suchang Youth Mansion Artists in Residency》(Suchang Youth Mansion, 2021), Vertical Line(2021) introduces a steel structure encountered in an everyday environment into the exhibition space, reconfiguring the boundary between art and reality. The formal language that originated from tradition increasingly connects with contemporary environments, extending beyond specific cultural signs toward a broader spatial awareness.
 
In the recent exhibition 《Even a Single Day is Long, If You Try to Understand》(Kimreeaa Gallery, Seoul, 2026), this trajectory unfolds in a more flexible manner. Here, the artist focuses on sensation and duration prior to understanding, allowing the work to be experienced rather than explained. What began as an engagement with traditional architecture expands into intangible elements such as light, emptiness, and the time of dwelling, as the work moves toward a more sensorial and open direction.

Style & Contents

Ahra Kim’s practice begins with the structural element of the canvas frame and gradually expands into diverse media and spatial contexts. In Untitled-Connection #1(2019), she dismantles and reassembles the wooden frame, introducing the joinery techniques of traditional architecture into painting. Through this process, painting no longer remains on the surface but operates through structure itself as a central formal element.
 
In the subsequent ‘Untitled’ series, she emphasizes vertical and horizontal structures based on the colors and patterns of dancheong, exploring the balance between color and structure. Repetition, symmetry, and complementary contrasts generate rhythm and tension within the composition, while traditional motifs function not as decoration but as elements that construct a formal order. During this period, her work maintains the format of painting while continuously expanding structural thinking.
 
The transition into spatial practice becomes evident in Vertical Line and Flat Pieces. Everyday materials such as steel structures and tiles acquire a new hierarchy within the exhibition space, and the works become closely tied to specific sites. Rather than fixing painting as a discrete object, these works extend it into something generated through relationships with its environment.
 
In recent works, material and sensory dimensions are treated with greater subtlety. In 《Even a Single Day is Long, If You Try to Understand》, the artist uses ink to reveal traces of time permeating linen and wood. Through repeated processes of dyeing and washing, the resulting darkness functions not merely as color but as a device that reveals the accumulation of materiality and time. In these works, where light, emptiness, and structure emerge simultaneously, the boundaries between painting, sculpture, and space are fluidly traversed.

Topography & Continuity

Ahra Kim’s practice unfolds across the boundaries of painting, sculpture, and architecture. However, rather than simply combining genres, her work connects these media through the shared foundation of “structure.” The canvas frame, architectural systems, and exhibition space exist on different levels, yet within her work they operate as a continuous system.
 
While her early works focused on the formal interpretation of traditional architectural structures, her practice later expands toward examining how these structures operate and form relationships. The spatial composition in 《Overpass》, the appropriation of everyday structures in Vertical Line, and the recent exploration of light and emptiness all demonstrate this progression in stages.
 
Ahra Kim does not consume traditional elements as images or symbols, but instead transforms them into structural principles. By maintaining the functional characteristics of objects and architectural elements while placing them within new contexts, she alters their meanings. Her work does not remain fixed within a single form, but retains a structure that can flexibly expand according to different conditions. By treating plane, volume, and space as a continuous field, her practice leaves open the possibility for variation across diverse environments and contexts, continuing to explore points where perception and structure intersect.

Works of Art

Three-Dimensional Forms, Planes, and Space in Shared Breath

Articles

Exhibitions

Activities