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Artwork
Kim Jinsoung
Mass of scenery, 2021

Oil on canvas, Oil pastel

65 x 35 cm

Unique work

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About the work

Materials
Oil on canvas, Oil pastel
Dimensions
65 x 35 cm
Frame
Frame not included
Signature
No signature

What if the landscapes we see every day aren’t truly “spread out,” but rather compressed - dense with memory, emotion, and time? From a distance - say, from space - what we call ‘landscape’ might appear as nothing more than a mass, a singular sphere of perception. In Mass of Landscape - Flight, Kim Jinsoung challenges our ways of seeing. A portion of a rolled toilet paper - mundane, soft, and perishable - unfurls to reveal a delicate, detailed panorama: birds soar across an expansive horizon, plains stretch under an unseen sun, and layers of color are built up like sediment of thought. This humble paper roll becomes the unexpected pedestal for a world that is at once tactile and contemplative. What may at first appear as a still life is actually a philosophical proposition. What if landscapes are not simply things we observe from the outside - but forms we carry within us, layered and compressed, like a memory folded in on itself? The artist suggests that the visible world is only one version of reality; another exists in how we hold and touch what we remember. By framing the landscape atop an object of fragility, Kim invites us to feel the contradiction: a visual scene grounded in the ordinary, rendered with painstaking care in oil, oil pastel, and colored pencil - mediums layered and pressed into the canvas over time. The birds in flight evoke more than mere motion - they carry within them the artist’s longing, a release of emotion, and a whispered echo of hope. Part of the artist’s ongoing Mass of Landscape series, this work evolves from his long-standing inquiry into “the seen and the unseen.” Here, the act of seeing becomes a method of holding - transforming a view into an object, an object into a presence, and a presence into meaning. This painting is not meant to be merely looked at. It asks to be felt, as if the landscape were something placed gently on a desk - still, quiet, but very much alive. For some, it may resonate like a memory. For others, a resting place for thought. One collector who purchased a piece from this series once shared a dream of their late father walking alone through a distant landscape - only to find that Kim’s painting mirrored it exactly. In moments like this, art crosses over: from form to feeling, from image to solace. This is a landscape that does not stand still. It hovers. It drifts. It flies - like a thought, a longing, a soft release.

About the artist

A Quiet Resonance That Reveals the Edges of Sensation — Emotional Landscapes Through Layers of Color and Line At first glance, Kim Jinsoung’s paintings may appear as still landscapes. But upon closer observation, one begins to notice something else: light that shifts with time, wind that brushes gently across the surface, and the delicate textures of emotion - condensed into countless subtle lines. Her work is not simply a record of “what was seen,” but a sensory language that recalls “what was felt.” Kim composes her surfaces with a fusion of oil pastel, colored pencil, and oil paint. This combination creates both a physical density and emotional depth, allowing the surface to carry the weight of memory. Thousands of short strokes, laid down in repeating rhythms, build a quiet flow - both a visual tempo and a temporal accumulation. Through this meditative layering, she internalizes the landscape and renders it perceptible to the viewer. One of her central bodies of work, the Mass of Scenery series, juxtaposes the external form of a scene with the internal sensation it evokes. In this series, landscapes are rarely consistent in space or time. They break apart, abstract, or dissolve into planes of color and strands of line. These are not representations of place, but paintings of atmosphere - of what is remembered, what lingers emotionally long after the image itself has faded. In The Road We Walk Together (2022), a gentle trail of footprints cuts across the canvas, inscribing time into a seemingly static field. The soft curves of white recall a snow-covered plain, yet the layered texture evokes both flickering light and the tender emotions of a walk remembered. In Border - Forest (2019), reddish-brown hues compress a forest into abstract shapes, marking a threshold between the visual end of a scene and the emotional beginning of something unseen. Through these works, Kim Jinsoung seeks more than to depict a landscape - she invites us to reorient our sensory experience. Her paintings pose quietly insistent questions: Are we truly seeing? How much do we trust our senses? What separates memory from the reality of what was? She offers no answers. Instead, her canvases gently recalibrate our perception, asking us to slow down and feel—to notice the emotional residue left behind by color, line, and texture. Her work speaks not in declarations, but in whispers that linger. Ultimately, Kim’s painting is a philosophical experiment disguised as landscape. Borrowing the language of the natural world, she invites reflection on the borders between sense and memory, between outer form and inner stillness. She chooses time over brushwork, emotion over depiction, silence over narrative. And in that silence, a world quietly unfolds. Selected Works The Road We Walk Together (2022) Border - Forest (2019) Mass of Scenery (2021)

Exhibitions (12)

2022

Mass of Scenery • Dorossy • Seoul [Solo show]

2020

Selected Artist Exhibition • Yangpyeong gun Art Museum • Yangpyeong [Solo show]

2019

Wishing the Wind Blows • Dorossy Gallery • Seoul [Solo show]

2018

Theoria • Ilho Gallery • Seoul [Solo show]

2012

Loose Skin • Moriss Gallery • Daejeon [Solo show]

2009

Separately, together, and together • Insa Art Gallery • Seoul [Solo show]

2009

Separately, together, and together • Gallery Ssangri • Daejeon [Solo show]

2009

Separately, together, and together • Soyeon Gallery • Daejeon [Solo show]

2007

Art Seoul Focus • Hanagaram Museum of Art, Seoul Arts Centre • Seoul [Solo show]

2006

Gaze • YIAN Gallery • Daejeon [Solo show]

2005

Theoria • Gana Art Space • Seoul [Solo show]

2002

The visible and the invisible • Galleria Time World Gallery • Daejeon [Solo show]