Saturday, June 13, 2026

SWPK Gallery exhibits, ~in Diaspora:Korean Artists~ June 25-September 26, 2026. This show is excellent. Enjoy the images.

Il Lee, TW - 2502, 2025, oil and acrylic on canvas, 32 x 27 inches

 

In Diaspora: Korean Artists in 1970s New York

Myong Hi Kim, Po Kim, Tchah Sup Kim, Woong Kim, Il Lee, and Choong Sup Lim


JUNE 25 – SEPTEMBER 26, 2026

OPENING: THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 6–8 PM


SWPK Gallery / The Sylvia Wald and Po Kim Art Foundation
417 Lafayette St, 2nd Floor, NYC. www.swpk.org

 
RSVP FOR THE OPENING
Tchah Sup Kim, Between Infinities (Two Lines), 1978, Copper plate etching, 22 x 25 inches
Myong Hi Kim, Dongja with Peach, 2007, Oil pastel on chalkboard, 90 x 60 inches

The 1970s marked a pivotal moment in the history of Korean artists working in New York. As the city emerged as the center of the international contemporary art world, artists arriving from Korea encountered new artistic movements, including Abstract Expressionism, Minimalism, Conceptual Art, and post-studio practices. Living between cultures, they navigated questions of identity, memory, and belonging while adapting to an unfamiliar social and artistic environment. Rather than choosing between Korean traditions and Western modernism, these artists forged distinctive visual languages that reflected both their cultural heritage and their experiences of migration.

This exhibition brings together six influential artists, Myong Hi Kim, Po Kim, Tchah Sup Kim, Woong Kim, Il Lee, and Choong Sup Lim, whose practices reveal the diverse ways Korean artists contributed to New York’s dynamic artistic landscape. Working across painting, drawing, sculpture, assemblage, and installation, they transformed the experience of diaspora into a catalyst for experimentation and innovation. Their works engage themes of memory, spirituality, labor, materiality, and cultural translation, demonstrating how artistic expression can emerge from the tensions and possibilities of living between worlds.

Myong Hi Kim addresses migration and memory through layered drawings on reclaimed blackboards, surfaces marked by erasure and renewal that serve as metaphors for displacement and cultural inheritance. Po Kim fused the gestural energy of Abstract Expressionism with the rhythmic sensibility of East Asian calligraphy, creating paintings that balance emotional intensity with meditative reflection.

Tchah Sup Kim developed a distinctive visual language that merged abstraction with symbolic imagery. Drawing from Eastern philosophy, mythology, and personal reflection, his paintings explore themes of transformation, spirituality, and cultural exchange. Woong Kim created contemplative works through repeated layers of oil paint and mixed media, producing subtle textures and tonal variations that emphasize duration, restraint, and lived experience.

Il Lee developed a distinctive abstract language through the accumulation of countless ballpoint pen marks, transforming an everyday writing instrument into a powerful tool for exploring time, movement, and process. His densely layered abstractions create immersive fields of depth and energy, while his later acrylic and oil paintings continue this exploration of line, form, and space through a process-driven approach grounded in experimentation and material sensitivity.

Choong Sup Lim developed an innovative practice that combines painting, sculpture, and installation through stretched fabric, thread, wood, and constructed forms. Built through processes of repetition and accumulation, his works transform simple materials into dynamic spatial structures that evoke memory, labor, and cultural transition.

Together, these artists represent an important chapter in the history of Korean art in America. Their works reveal how migration became a source of creative transformation, generating new forms of abstraction and material exploration while expanding the language of contemporary art. Through their diverse practices, they offer enduring reflections on identity, memory, and belonging, demonstrating how artistic innovation emerges through movement, adaptation, and cultural exchange.

 

Choong Sup Lim, Gil-ssam, 2000-2006, Natural Korean cotton threads, wood, oil paint, acrylic, and U.V.L.S. gel, 30 x 200 inches 
Po Kim, Together and Apart, 1970, Acrylic on canvas, 60 x 72 inches
Woong Kim, Untitled, 2026, Oil and mixed media on canvas, 20 x 16 inches

ABOUT SWPK GALLERY

SWPK Gallery — The Sylvia Wald & Po Kim Art Foundation — is a non-profit organization committed to promoting East-West cultural exchange through the arts by sponsoring and hosting art exhibitions of national and international artists. For more information, visit: swpk.org

In Diaspora: Korean Artists in 1970s New York is produced in collaboration with the Donghwa Cultural Foundation.

SWPK Gallery
417 Lafayette Street, 2nd Floor
New York, NY 10003
Phone: 212.598.1155

Email: info@waldandkimgallery.org
Media inquiries: Odelette Cho ocho@waldandkimgallery.org
Instagram
Facebook
Website
Email
swpkgallery#fineartmagazineblog.blog.blogspot.com#sunstormfinearmagazine.com
#summerfineartfun#artfundiversity#artfunbeauty

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.