Bohyeon Hwang
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Bohyeon HwangThe Red and the Hard, 2026Oil on cotton40 x 100 cm
15 3/4 x 39 3/8 in -
Bohyeon HwangBlooming, 2025Oil on linen115 x 100 cm
45 1/4 x 39 3/8 in -
Bohyeon HwangBroken Cucumber, 2025Oil on canvas200 x 150 cm
78 3/4 x 59 in -
Bohyeon HwangBroken Cucumber 2, 2025Oil on canvas200 x 150 cm
78 3/4 x 59 in -
Bohyeon HwangCandles, 2025Oil on canvas50 x 50 cm
19 3/4 x 19 3/4 in -
Bohyeon HwangFlowing, 2025Oil on linen90 x 140 cm
35 3/8 x 55 1/8 in -
Bohyeon HwangFrozen Cabbage, 2025Oil on linen120 x 150 cm
47 1/4 x 59 in -
Bohyeon HwangMelting, 2025Oil on canvas68.4 x 164 cm
26 7/8 x 64 5/8 in -
Bohyeon HwangPeeling, 2025Oil on canvas140 x 50 cm
55 1/8 x 19 3/4 in -
Bohyeon HwangBone and Apple, 2024Oil on canvas18 x 13 cm
7 1/8 x 5 1/8 in -
Bohyeon HwangCandles, 2024Oil on canvas50 x 50 cm
19 3/4 x 19 3/4 in -
Bohyeon HwangHow to Reach Out to You, 2024Oil on canvas90 x 140 cm
35 3/8 x 55 1/8 in -
Bohyeon HwangMelting Table, 2024Oil on canvas115 x 55 cm
45 1/4 x 21 5/8 in -
Bohyeon HwangSubjects watching TV and a not-sad Moon, 2024Oil on canvas90 x 140 cm
35 3/8 x 55 1/8 in -
Bohyeon HwangYour Rest, 2024Oil on canvas180 x 160 cm
70 7/8 x 63 in -
Bohyeon HwangTik Tak Tok, 2023Oil on canvas50 x 50 cm
19 3/4 x 19 3/4 in
Bohyeon Hwang is a South Korean artist whose painting practice explores the tension between proximity and distance—between the material surface of things and the elusive meanings they may withhold. Working across discarded canvases, layered pigments and drawn textures, Hwang constructs works that blur the boundary between the tactile and the imagined. Her images are not so much representations of objects as they are responses to the emotional life of objects—fragments, residues, and overlooked matter that return as visual echoes.
At the heart of her practice lies an interest in how things survive transformation—how the texture of a velvet cloth, the hollow of a box, or a torn scrap of paper might retain traces of presence even when their use, function, or name has disappeared. Hwang collects and redraws digital images of objects she encounters both in real life and online, often transforming them into near-phantasmic forms. Her canvases are built through acts of layering, scraping, sanding, and stitching. These gestures do not conceal the painting’s surface—they reveal it as a site of memory, loss, and quiet resistance.
Informed by philosophical enquiries—particularly Heidegger’s notion of the “readiness-to-hand” of tools—Hwang reflects on how objects are encountered not as symbols, but as companions in the unfolding of daily life. Her works dwell in this in-between space: emotionally near, yet conceptually distant. They speak in the language of surfaces—cracked, rubbed, knotted—yet never flatten into decorative gesture. Instead, they ask how love, attention, and meaning might persist in things cast aside.
Hwang completed an MFA in Painting at the Frank Mohr Institute in Groningen, following previous degrees from Ewha Womans University (BFA/MFA, Seoul). She has exhibited in the Netherlands and Korea, including the group exhibition at the Royal Award for Modern Painting (Palace Amsterdam).
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Bohyeon Hwang wins the prize at Novembre à Vitry 2025 30 September 2025We are delighted to share that Bohyeon Hwang has been awarded the Prix de Novembre à Vitry 2025 for her work Subjects watching TV and...Read more -
Enseoul announces debut at PAN Amsterdam 2025 18 July 2025We’re thrilled to announce that Enseoul will make its debut at PAN Amsterdam 2025, taking place from 1–9 November 2025 in Amsterdam. For this inaugural...Read more
