
$1,864
Home – Curtain is a work about the thin boundary that lies between inside and outside within the home. A curtain does not completely block off a space, but instead filters light and air, allowing the outside landscape to pass through in a blurred way. I wanted to express this softly permeating scene through the materiality of hanji. Because hanji is a paper with living fibres, the pigment seeps into its surface, creating subtle bleeds and layers. These diffusions can resemble light passing through curtain fabric. For this reason, in this work I sought to reveal not so much a clear form as overlapping colours and flowing traces. The scratched and blended surface made by pigment and modelling paste can evoke the folds of a curtain stirred by the wind, or a scene in which the view beyond the curtain appears faintly superimposed. Home – Curtain is an attempt to preserve within the picture plane a scene in which interior and exterior meet gently—like the moment of looking outside from within the home, or the moment when outside air softly enters the room.
Artwork details+
- Medium
- Pigment and modelling paste on jangji
- Size
- 79 cm x 128 cm x 3 cm
- Year
- unknown
- Signature
- KIJEONG KIM
- Edition
- Unique work
- Certificate
- Certificate of Authenticity issued by the gallery
Shipping & taxes+
- Ships from the gallery's location (set per work, defaults to the gallery address)
- Cost calculated at checkout by destination
- Optional full insurance in transit
- Usually ships within 10 business days, fine-art packed
- In-person pickup available for some works (no shipping fee)
- Listed price may include VAT applicable in the seller's country or the work's place of shipment
- Duties, import VAT/GST, customs fees, and other taxes in the buyer's country are not included and are the buyer's responsibility
- These are assessed by the destination customs authority and billed separately by the carrier
- Sales tax may be added at checkout depending on jurisdiction

I am constantly in search of people and places that bring me a sense of stability. In life, I am always confronted with certain thresholds where I long for steadiness. At those boundaries, I find myself seeking environments and situations that help me maintain a calm emotional state. Most of these are familiar to me: my family, my home, my room, and the surroundings that have held me for a long time. When I ask myself where the process of being filled and forming a sense of self first began, I cannot leave out home and family. I hold close to my heart the softness and warmth of these things, and the precious moments at home where I can express my feelings honestly. In doing so, I try to preserve a quiet emotional balance. It was only natural, then, that the act of painting and the choice of what to paint began with what was closest to me. As I step into the home and room marked by my own traces, I find myself covering over the unstable emotions I could not express outside, and recovering a sense of calm and peace. I capture in my paintings the blue wallpaper close to my body, the scattered blue clothes, the blue blankets and pillows—objects that bear the touch of my hand. Along with them, I try to hold within the painting the tactile sensations of these things against the skin, as well as the emotions of those moments: the comfort, warmth, and tenderness that arise from familiarity. The feeling of fur brushing between my toes, the rush of air when my father lifts the blanket high and lets it fall while I am lying down, the snug warmth of tucking the blanket tightly around my body, the feeling of touching the cool temperature that has settled into the pillow because of the wind outside, the soft texture of an old blanket worn thin with holes, a pair of socks turned inside out on the floor, the faint sunlight slipping through the blinds, the sunlight and brightness that reach me as I lie down, the moon visible through the window before sleep... I gather these emotions and sensations from my own place and wrap them together, trying to paint their atmosphere and energy. In the process of expression, the act of applying materials softly onto hanji, or tearing its surface to reveal its delicate fibres, has itself become a process through which I find emotional calm. Through the repeated gestures of laying down thick layers of paint and scraping them away, or raising the surface of the hanji, I attempt to convey indirectly a kind of fluffy, tender warmth even through the material surface itself. Ultimately, I hope that a painting, shaped by the attitude revealed in both the subject I look at and the process of making, can become a bearer of warmth—something held close at one’s side—and that the scope of this warmth may gradually expand.
Go to artist page →
Since its establishment, Gallery Kabinett has aimed to play a pivotal role in managing and establishing promising artists, both domestically and internationally. Through strategic institutional introductions and comprehensive artist development programs, we seek to explore the various possibilities of visual arts by close collaboration with other industries. We strive to enhance the competitiveness of Korean art and align it with global standards, all while showcasing Korean artistic elements to ultimately exert significant global influence.
Go to gallery page →$1,864
Home – Curtain is a work about the thin boundary that lies between inside and outside within the home. A curtain does not completely block off a space, but instead filters light and air, allowing the outside landscape to pass through in a blurred way. I wanted to express this softly permeating scene through the materiality of hanji. Because hanji is a paper with living fibres, the pigment seeps into its surface, creating subtle bleeds and layers. These diffusions can resemble light passing through curtain fabric. For this reason, in this work I sought to reveal not so much a clear form as overlapping colours and flowing traces. The scratched and blended surface made by pigment and modelling paste can evoke the folds of a curtain stirred by the wind, or a scene in which the view beyond the curtain appears faintly superimposed. Home – Curtain is an attempt to preserve within the picture plane a scene in which interior and exterior meet gently—like the moment of looking outside from within the home, or the moment when outside air softly enters the room.
Artwork details+
- Medium
- Pigment and modelling paste on jangji
- Size
- 79 cm x 128 cm x 3 cm
- Year
- unknown
- Signature
- KIJEONG KIM
- Edition
- Unique work
- Certificate
- Certificate of Authenticity issued by the gallery
Shipping & taxes+
- Ships from the gallery's location (set per work, defaults to the gallery address)
- Cost calculated at checkout by destination
- Optional full insurance in transit
- Usually ships within 10 business days, fine-art packed
- In-person pickup available for some works (no shipping fee)
- Listed price may include VAT applicable in the seller's country or the work's place of shipment
- Duties, import VAT/GST, customs fees, and other taxes in the buyer's country are not included and are the buyer's responsibility
- These are assessed by the destination customs authority and billed separately by the carrier
- Sales tax may be added at checkout depending on jurisdiction
$1,864







