
Hyeyeon Chung is GlogauAIR resident
from July, 2025 to September, 2025
Chung’s art bridges tradition and modernity, geography and memory. Through careful textures, monochrome palettes, and mixed media, she invites viewers into a space to reconsider how we perceive landscapes, memories, and our connections to place and people. Her collaborative curation and visibility in international exhibitions demonstrate both reflective intent and active engagement in London’s art scene.

Meet the Artist
Could you tell me a bit about your background and the project you’re proposing for this three-month residency here at GlogauAIR?
I ́m originally from South Korea, I was born and grew up in Seoul and studied traditional Korean painting there, influenced by Chinese landscape painting, using a quite traditional methodology and material. Later, I completed my master’s in Drawing at the University of the Arts London. Living and working between Korea, Ireland, the UK, and now Germany, has shaped my perspective as both an artist and a diasporic subject.
At GlogauAIR, I am developing my proposed project that explores memory and perception through ink, linen, and embroidered gestures. I ́m also quite interested in how images can carry traces of displacement, silence, and longing, while also opening space for new interpretations within a shared environment.
Abstraction and perception, nostalgia and diasporic experiences are some of the subjects that you explore in your work. How do you see these themes connecting to each other in your practice?
For me, abstraction is a way to approach what cannot be fully explained—like memories that are fragmented, or emotions tied to displacement. Nostalgia often emerges as a double-edged experience, so it can connect me to a cultural past but also highlight what is lost or unreachable. And, diasporic experiences sharpen the awareness of distance, and this perception becomes the means through which I try to articulate that tension. That ́s the biggest reason why I use fabric and create tension in the drawing. My works don’t illustrate these ideas directly but instead create spaces where viewers might sense them for themselves.
Weft, weaving, and textile references appear in your work. Could you share how these materials or processes inform your artistic language?
I see weaving both literally and metaphorically. The linen I work with already contains a woven structure that holds tension between fragility and resilience. By layering ink, thread, or stitched lines, I engage with this structure as if I’m weaving memories into the surface. And there is also the power of materiality. The physical movement when making numerous strokes and dots, after I reach a moment where I feel like I ́m a print machine. I ́m always looking forward to seeing that moment.
These processes allow me to connect traditional practices with contemporary abstraction, while also echoing the way personal and cultural histories are interlaced, never linear, always intersecting.
Your works invite the audience to look closely and see beyond the surface…What kind of effect or response do you hope to evoke in the viewer?
I hope to create a moment of pause. When someone looks at my work, I want them to sense both presence and absence, what is revealed and what remains hidden. The slight shifts in ink, the tension of the fabric, or the interruptions of embroidery ask the viewer to slow down and consider what lies beneath appearances. This is why I don ́t like saying “this is my painting”, I like to name it my drawing, because for me a painting is tons of layers and layers coming towards me. But drawing is just the opposite way. It ́s flat. It’s really going to the ground, and you can observe some of the fragments of it. That’s also why I always prefer using monochrome, and no glossy acrylic. Ideally, this close look can evoke both intimacy and distance, mirroring the layered experiences of memory and perception that inform my practice.
Statement
Chung’s art bridges tradition and modernity, geography and memory. Through careful textures, monochrome palettes, and mixed media, she invites viewers into a space to reconsider how we perceive landscapes, memories, and our connections to place and people. Her collaborative curation and visibility in international exhibitions demonstrate both reflective intent and active engagement in London’s art scene.
GlogauAIR Project
Framing & Perspective: By isolating sections of her repetitively marked compositions within narrow virtual windows, Chung invites viewers to pause and focus—emphasizing intimate glimpses rather than expansive views. Memory & the Diasporic Gaze: These windowed drawings evoke the act of looking out and looking in—metaphors for both nostalgia and migration. Material Tension: Ink on linen and metallic backings highlight contrasts between softness and industrial hardness, exploring presence and absence.
CV Summary
Education
- 2011–2016 BA in Korean Traditional Painting, Chung-Ang University, Seoul, ROK
- 2023–2024 MA in Fine Art: Drawing, Camberwell College of Arts, University of the Arts London, UK
Solo Exhibitions
- 2020 “Recollection of Scene,” Gallery Knot, Seoul, ROK
- 2019 “Unspecified Moments,” WUNDER KIND Art Space, Seoul, ROK
- 2019 “Unspecific Landscape Collections and Memory,” SUHWOO Gallery, Seoul, ROK
- 2018 “Improvise Collecting of Landscape,” la Dolce Berlin, Berlin, Germany
Group Exhibitions
- 2025 Those Beginning Notes, Warbling, London, UK
- 2025 Connectology, Roha Gallery, London, UK
- 2024 Inter-secting Lines, London SU Gallery Space, London, UK
- 2024 Where We’re Calling From, Copeland Gallery, London, UK
- 2024 Water, Oil, Honey, The Crypt Gallery, London, UK
- 2024 In-between, Peckham Levels (UAL), London, UK
Art Fair
- 2021 Blue Art Fair, Paradise Hotel, Busan, ROK
- 2021 PLAS2021 Formative Art Seoul, COEX Hall B, Seoul, ROK
Residencies & Awards
- 2024 Winner, Student Award at Trinity Buoy Wharf Drawing Prize
- 2024 Studio 18 Millbank Summer Residency, London, UK
- 2025 GlogauAIR Residency, Berlin, Germany
Collections
- Youngeun Museum
- Pritive
Gallery






