Korean School
19th century
A leopard, two tigers and a magpie
Jakhodo
watercolour, silk, gilt
the panel gilt-edged and now laid on a green patterned silk ground
framed 124.5cm. by 82cm.
4 3/4in. by 2ft. 8 1/4in.

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Switzerland

seen from Maldives
seen from China
seen from Indonesia

seen from Germany

seen from Maldives

seen from Philippines

seen from Indonesia

seen from Belarus
seen from Brazil
seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from United States
seen from Switzerland

seen from Malaysia
seen from Malaysia

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
Korean School
19th century
A leopard, two tigers and a magpie
Jakhodo
watercolour, silk, gilt
the panel gilt-edged and now laid on a green patterned silk ground
framed 124.5cm. by 82cm.
4 3/4in. by 2ft. 8 1/4in.
The actor Ichikawa Danjuro II
1688 - 1758
Torii Kiyomitsu II 二代目 鳥居清満
1787 - 1869
aussi nommé Kiyomine 清峰(きよみね)
风拂荷香过/启功
The wind blows the lotus fragrance
Qi Gong
中国传统文化
Traditional Chinese Culture
Unknown artist
Two Catfish as Street Musicians in the Kashina district
Jishin no sucharaka
1855
Grim Park
My Road
korean traditional painter
acrylic on silk
2022
Lâm Tùng Nguyễn
Vietnamese artist
creatures and Strange things existing
13th century
Persian manuscripts
xpuigc
Yool Kim
South korean artist painter
“A Peaceful Afternoon”
“An Autumn Night”
“Cozy & Silent”
COLOSSAL
Swans, Plants, and Fragmented Figures Warmly Embrace in Yool Kim’s Paintings
November 28, 2024
Art
Grace Ebert
Warmth permeates Yool Kim’s most recent body of work, which portrays tangled masses of limbs and swans in rich palettes of reds, pinks, and oranges.
Laying dense lines in acrylic paint, the Seoul-based artist examines the interactions between living things and their sometimes contradictory desires. Her new paintings entwine fragmented iterations of human figures with graceful black and white birds, monsteras, and ferns to explore peace and equality.
“I wanted to express the beauty of being able to care (for) the weak and taking care of each other, without a sense of superiority and inferiority in living things that are set by the world,” Kim tells Colossal. “By hugging, touching, or leaning on each other, I highlighted the meaning of connection and warmth.”
As with earlier bodies of work, this series similarly explores the fractured nature of the self. Kim shares that she’s feeling calmer and more tranquil these days, which is reflected in the ways figures stretch to embrace one another.
“I also wanted to express that I have many egos and personalities within me; I am a human being full of complexity who cannot grasp existence as a single disposition,” she adds. “I’m always considering myself.”
Kim will show paintings in several exhibitions this spring, the first of which opens in March at Hall Spassov in Seattle.
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