Kim Chong Hak, Painter of Seoraksan
High Museum of Art
April 11–November 2, 2025
Atlanta, GA
Mountains are the first museums, I often remind my students, and not just because mountaineering and museum-going affect similar fatigues on the body. The oldest artworks are found in mountainous caverns across the world, from Indonesia and the Iberian Peninsula to the Andes and the Pacific Northwest. These prehistoric sites demonstrate the capacity of mountains to hold memory, to keepsake and preserve, often through isolation. Little wonder artists from Alexandre Calame to Katsushika Hokusai have made mountains so central to their work. Little wonder art so often returns to the mountain in times of unrest, even today.
Kim Chong Hak, Painter of Seoraksan, the contemporary Korean artist’s first US museum survey on view at the High Museum of Art, returns once again to the mountains—specifically, Mount Seorak, the titular Seoraksan and largest peak of the Taebaek Mountain range that runs along the eastern coast of the Korean Peninsula. Kim, whose family was displaced from the north during the Korean War, studied art and lived abroad before settling on Seoraksan in 1979, making its diverse climate his primary subject. Since then, the artist, who continues to paint, has produced a body of work both movingly quiescent and surprisingly boisterous. His most famous works consist of large-format landscapes dotted with forest flowers and meandering kudzu; for instance, the four-panel Pandemonium (2018)—which fills the museum’s walls until it wraps around the corner—is a lesson the artist takes directly from the mountains, their forests curving up to the verticality of the peak, surrounding the viewer.
The show opens with Kim’s earliest works, largely abstract pieces following various trends of the early-1970s, from Dansaekhwa to Post-Minimalism. An untitled 1978 work draws together informal and abstract tendencies, while its surface hints at older inkwork techniques. (The influence of traditional and folk arts, another theme of the exhibition, is explored through a collection of objects installed throughout the show.) Rather than follow a chronology, the exhibition chooses to bivouac back and forth across Kim’s mature works, marshalling them into interconnected sections devoted to the seasons. Such an organizing principle emerges organically from the works themselves; as the artist puts it in the catalogue for the show, “I spend all four seasons with the mountain, drawing spring in spring, summer in summer, autumn in autumn, and winter in winter.” The choice to take this process so seriously and make it the structural core of the show is laudable, perhaps in part because it reveals what is always true: no two springs, two summers, or two autumns are ever alike. The subtlest variations between days, weeks, and years give Kim’s work its most felicitous edge.