[ZOOM KOREA] Artist can see the forest through the trees
When she was younger, Kim lived in a traditional-style home in Yesan, South Chungcheong, with a roof made of straw. Thanks to her parents, who love flowers, there were different kinds of flowers throughout her house, like bongsunga - known as impatiens balsamina - and chaesonghwa - known as rose moss. Trees were abundant in her front yard, including chestnuts, poplars and planes. Some mulberry trees were also planted by a field in front of their yard.
Mount Baemi was right behind her house. The world of her imagination unfolded while she watched interestingly-shaped clouds hit the middle of the mountain right after the rain stopped. She imagined that the god of the mountain or an angel would get on the clouds to reach the ground. She started to capture what she saw.
Paper was rare and expensive back then, so the yard became Kim’s canvas. She used sharpened twigs to draw on the soil. Sometimes she got to draw on paper when her brothers saved some pages of their notebooks or when her father handed over a bag that was used to carry cement. Sometimes she spent an entire day lying down in the yard drawing.
She began to visit her friends and acquaintances’ art studios. That naturally led her to reach out for a paint brush. She painted what she wanted to on canvas. As she started, her condition got better. She became livelier and brighter. That’s when she started to focus on painting birch trees.
One may feel they are reading a fable when they look at Kim’s works. The blue tone she often uses inspires people to be more emotional and inspirational. The moon and some stars, often appearing in her work reflect the memories of her younger days and the dreams she had back then. The images are connected to the time she spent living surrounded by nature.
Birch trees on Kim’s earlier canvases show the point of view she takes towards the world and the ideas she once had. But her more recent works seem to have evolved, focusing more on the lights, sounds and scenes that surround both the birch trees and the greater forest. She wants her artwork to be a medium to encourage communication among visitors: anyone who takes a look at her works can approach art more easily.
The artist said the very core of the forest is the mother - the essence of a life - as well as a nurturing channel. While what’s seen right away are the different colors that make the forest, you will soon find the forest is also home to sounds from chipmunks, woodpeckers and other animals living there. The sounds achieve harmony with flowing water and falling snow from a twig tumbling to the ground. Once you get closer, there are the sounds of creatures hibernating under the snow waiting for spring to come.
Just like she has done so far, she makes a promise to herself that she will continue painting birch trees. She also wants her work to be comforting to those who are hurt and tired. She wants time spent viewing her work to feel like sitting beneath a canopy of trees after a long walk during those hot summer days you can feel the breeze to cool down.
BY PARK SANG-MOON [moonpark@joongang.co.kr]
with the Korea JoongAng Daily
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