Art protects art
8 out of 10
artists are shut out by banks
354
loans extended to fellow artists
95%
repayment rate — trust comes full circle
~KRW 140M
interest saved vs. predatory rates
Until the next exhibition, the next performance. For artists, income gaps are an unavoidable reality. For fellow artists forced into predatory loans just to afford paint, canvas, and studio rent, proceeds from this artwork become the Seed Fund — extending a fair hand at fair rates.
Voices of fellow artists
“The memory of going hungry for three days, alone, so my children wouldn't know.”
— 50s, theater artist
“I've been putting off urgent dental treatment because I can't afford it. I should be seeing a doctor regularly, but enduring instead of going has become a habit.”
— 50s, actor
“I kept delaying ear treatment because I had no money, and the symptoms in both ears worsened.”
— 30s, musician
“I couldn't pay my hospitalized mother's bills, so we had to delay her discharge, and she had to give up tests and treatment she needed.”
— 50s, actor/broadcaster
“Because of money troubles I had nowhere to go — drifting between gosiwon rooms and rehearsal studios, and for a while sleeping rough.”
— 30s, musician
“Because of unpaid rent, my collective was forced to vacate our shared workspace and home. Neither bank loans nor artist loans could help.”
— 50s, actor
“Without money, life collapses — and creating art? Out of the question.”
— 50s, artist
“It's painful that solving this month's money problems has to come before the work itself. As an artist, I can only earn well when the work succeeds — yet I have to chase odd jobs every month instead. It feels like being trapped in a vicious cycle.”
— 40s, musician
“Debt collection calls disrupted my rehearsals and performances, and the psychological burden made every day painful and the next day frightening.”
— 40s, theater artist
“Many times the loan payments looming each month forced me to step away from performing and focus on part-time work.”
— 50s, actor
“Sleeping less than four hours a night, juggling part-time jobs and theater — but the more I performed, the more debt piled up. Eventually I decided to quit performing.”
— 30s, actor
“When things were hardest, I couldn't even attend close friends' weddings or funerals — and as a result, relationships were severed.”
— 50s, actor/broadcaster
“When I said I was a stage actor, the loan officer called me "unemployed."”
— 50s, actor
“The shame and severed friendships that came with borrowing from people I knew, the pressure of failing to pay it back, the helplessness.”
— 50s, cartoonist/visual artist
“Even with programs meant for low-income citizens, I feel shame when I can't produce enough documentation simply because I'm an artist.”
— 30s, film/broadcasting professional
94 artworks sold, each becoming a seed of solidarity
One artwork becomes the oxygen that keeps a fellow artist creating.
Sales proceeds go to the artist mutual-aid fund.
WildFlower Collage 26
Kim Uju
Authenticity
One-of-a-kind original
About the Artist
Kim Wooju is a painter who translates the life cycles and landscapes of wildflowers into painterly form. After completing her M.F.A. and Ph.D. coursework at the Department of Painting, Graduate School of Hongik University, she presented solo exhibitions 〈Wildflower Season 1〉 at the Hongik University Museum of Modern Art (2023) and 〈Pictorial Impulse〉 at PiaLuxART Gallery (2016). Her work has been featured in the Bank of Korea Emerging Artist Exhibition, the Seoul Young Artist Discovery Project 'Bisang,' and 'Stepping Stone for a Leap' at Tapgol Museum of Art.
Artist Statement
Observation and Affinity: Wildflower Collage, 2023 — Kim Seo-woo I grew up in a remote rural village, close to nature, and had plenty of experience working in the fields. Planting chili pepper seedlings or beans was simply a part of my childhood routine. One day, I noticed unfamiliar wildflowers I had never planted growing around the field. These wildflowers came to me differently from mere weeds, and looking them up in the plant encyclopedias on my father's bookshelf became one of my joys. These memories and experiences faded for a while, but as an adult moving to Seoul (the city) for school, they naturally became the subject of my work. For the past several years I have painted landscapes drawn from the natural scenery still living within me. The new series I began last year departs from those childhood field experiences. I gather wildflowers that go unnoticed by those around me and complete paintings through collage. As if writing a daily diary, I collect the wildflowers and blossoms growing near my home — mugwort, sowthistle, lamb's quarters, and others — paint them onto small fragments of canvas, and then assemble those fragments into a single painting in collage form. Painted on countless small pieces of canvas cloth, the wildflowers and blossoms appear as a colony, while each tuft of grass also reveals its own individuality. This way of working is an obsessive attention paid to the discarded and overlooked around me; the irregular way that canvases of different wildflowers come together as a single image embodies my fractured self, where the comfort and the noise of chaos exist side by side. When I read the British cultural critic Raymond Williams' book The Country and the City, I encountered a recurring human pattern across these two opposite environments: country dwellers long for the city, and city dwellers long for the country. Williams describes this as a structure of feeling rooted in nostalgia, a response to particular social distortions. Put simply, urbanites carry vague fantasies of bucolic country life, while country dwellers carry vague fantasies of urban sophistication and social life — and this is itself a cultural phenomenon. Williams writes that country and city each distort one another in thought. I was born and raised in the countryside and came to the city for school. Within me lies an unbridgeable rift between these two environments, and I keep filling its gap with vague curiosity and fantasy. Thus the wildflowers ignored by the city are pieces of myself, and my paintings — gathering wildflowers and harmonizing them in collage form — are images of myself, fractured between the urban environment and the pastoral one yet bound together by a single thread of contemplation.
Key Career Highlights
2013 M.F.A., Department of Painting, Graduate School, Hongik University 2024 Ph.D. coursework completed, Department of Painting, Graduate School, Hongik University Solo Exhibitions 2016 Pictorial Impulse, PiaLuxART Gallery, Seoul, Korea 2023 Wildflower Season 1, Hongik University Museum of Modern Art, Seoul, Korea Group Exhibitions 2024 Seoul Young Artist Discovery Project Bisang, Sewoon Hall, Seoul, Korea Stepping Stone for a Leap, Tapgol Museum of Art, Seoul, Korea Bank of Korea Emerging Artist Exhibition, Bank of Korea Gallery, Seoul, Korea 2021 Space Simulation, AI Museum x VR Museum, Seoul, Korea 2017 Union Art Fair, Seoul, Korea 2016 OLD & NEW, Kansong Art and Culture Foundation, Seoul, Korea 2016 Rooftop Life Exhibition, Alternative Space Oktop, Seoul, Korea 2014 Flea Market + Another Christmas, Posco Art Museum, Seoul, Korea 2013 Challenge, Hongik University Modern Art Museum, Seoul, Korea 2012 Close to You, Street Gallery, Seoul, Korea 2014 Log Out, Litmus Gallery, Ansan, Korea
Related materials
Korean media · Original Korean article
This article text is currently available in Korean. Open the source to read the original version.
Korean media · Original Korean article
This article text is currently available in Korean. Open the source to read the original version.
Korean media · Original Korean article
This article text is currently available in Korean. Open the source to read the original version.
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Recently Sold
94 artworks sold recently
Two beginnings made by one piece
- For you —
- One-of-a-kind in the world
- For the artist —
- the next month of their practice
- For a fellow artist —
- a new ₩3,000,000 path of low-interest support
354 artists have walked this path of recovery; 95% returned to open it for the next.



