Chase Contemporary is pleased to announce its first solo show of paintings by globally renowned artist Sky Kim. Kim’s works explore themes ranging from sacred geometry to reincarnation. Incorporating circles and sacred spirals in her work, Sky draws on physics as an inspiration, “as a means of trying to figure out what we are made of and who we are. I believe in oneness.” Microscopic Obsession will feature a selection of large and small-scale works on paper, and will be on view from April 7 through May 1 at Chase Contemporary’s SoHo gallery. An opening reception will be held on Thursday, April 7, from 6-8pm at 413 West Broadway.
Microscopic Obsession celebrates Kim’s oeuvre across her Multiverse and Portal series, which use celestial imagery and mandalas to draw viewers into other dimensions. Each work is a voyage into Kim’s mind, psyche, and creative process. Her repetitive patterns create vibrations and can function as optical illusions, while awakening emotions through her scientific and spiritual queries. The multiverse is a philosophical concept that suggests there are numerous, parallel universes overlapping our own, each with its own unique trajectories and histories. Kim’s work often references the parallel worlds that define the multiverse. For instance, inner vs. outer space is a common motif in her art, and her intricate watercolor scrolls straddle both 2- and 3-dimensional space simultaneously.
The many marine-related themes in Kim’s work also originate from her pervasive interest in the multiverse. The ocean is one of the few observable alternate worlds here on Earth. Kim notes her fascination with odd sea creatures, describing how she is “…glued to their ballerina-like movements and mysteriously transparent bodies and luminosity. Such fragile aquatic forms including soft globular colonies in my work hints at our most ancient unicellular ancestors.” Kim’s work has many compositional affinities with traditional mandalas, which use repetitive patterns as instruments of meditation. Indeed, she mentions that “repeating patterns is like citing a mantra over and over again,” and that the creation of her work is a deeply meditational act.
Sky Kim was born in Seoul, South Korea, and lives and works in New York, where she spends as much as 12 to 14 hours a day in her studio. The labor intensive nature of Kim’s work is critical to understanding its broader meaning. She notes that “Time is the most precious thing to me.” The time invested in her work is meditational and allows her to access a different, transcendental state of mind. Kim draws inspiration from quantum physics, the study of matter and energy at the most fundamental levels, and sacred geometry, which asserts that certain geometrical shapes and proportions embody sacred meanings.Kim earned a M.F.A in Painting from Pratt Institute, and won the National Museum of Contemporary Art's National Korean Art Competition Awards and a Pratt Institute Art Grant. Her work has been exhibited at major venues and art fairs throughout the world, including the Toronto International Art Fair, GLAAD Art Auction, DUMBO Arts Festival, Gwangju Biennale, MOCA DC, Governors Island Art Fair, and Art Miami. She has lectured as a guest artist at several universities.
Sky Kim
The Third Eye, 2022
Watercolor, Crystals on Paper
42 x 42"
Sky Kim
Multiverse Series- Untitled 1, 2019
Watercolor & Mixed Media on Paper
40 x 40"
Sky Kim
Portal Series- Untitled 3, 2018
Watercolor & Mixed Media on Paper
40 x 40"
Sky Kim
Disco Universe (Multiverse Series), 2022
Watercolor, Acrylics, Gauche, Crystals on Paper
48 x 40"
Sky Kim
Multiverse Series- Glow, 2018
Watercolor & Mixed Media on Paper
48 x 48"
Sky Kim
Portal Series- Keyhole, 2018
Watercolor & Mixed Media on Paper
60 x 42"
Sky Kim
Portal Series- Untitled 2, 2019
Watercolor & Mixed Media on Paper
42 x 42"
Sky Kim
Scroll Series, 2008
Watercolor on Paper
42 x 360"
Sky Kim
Spore Burst (Microuniverse Series), 2022
Watercolor, Gauche, Acrylics, Crystals on Paper
60 x 60"
Sky Kim
Untitled (Bundled-up Universe), 2021
Watercolor on Paper
48 x 62"
Sky Kim
Spiraling Strands of Human DNA (Portal Series), 2022
Watercolor, Acrylics, Crystals on Paper
59 x 59"