KIM-LEE KHO
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Keeping Uncanny Company at the Power Plant Exhibition

9/5/2017

2 Comments

 
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Mute witnesses still sitting at attention but lost to us, as if frozen by the last testimony they saw and heard. Standing in front of this blind yet staring audience felt distinctly odd. | All photos by Kim-Lee Kho

On Sunday I went to The Power Plant in Toronto to catch the Ydessa Hendeles show ‘The Milliner’s Daughter’ before it closed a day later. I went because an artist friend of mine, Victoria Cowan, pointed out its connection to what I do. 

There were many rooms of work, each with a different story to tell. What struck me most strongly at first was how extraordinary the objects were, gathered by Hendeles over many years – a lifetime even.

Some items such as the numerous vitrines and two pairs of oversized pince-nez, were exquisitely crafted, as were the focus of my visit: the truly amazing collection of mannequins.

'Containment' is a sculpture installation, featuring photo-digital figures in light boxes, that grew out of my 'Boxed In' series, pictured below. Click here to see more.

Some were tiny miniatures some life sized or larger; some mechanical toys, but most the kind used by artists to this day.

The combinations, poses, containment or not, scale contrasts whether between figures or between a figure and the furniture it was placed on, they all set up narrative possibilities, which were hard for the brain to resist.

The uncanny feeling of these articulated dolls comes from the conflict between our cognitive understanding that yes, of course these are inanimate, often very stylized mannequins, but on the other hand how life-like their presence was.

It was very interesting to me as someone who teaches figure and portrait to note how little our brains need to register something as a human being, much like the instances of well-known, often religious figures' faces being found on pieces of toast or a stain on a wall.

​As for the connection to my work, some of which is pictured here, I think I’ll let it speak for itself except to say these ‘Boxed In’ figure works formed the basis for a broader range of work and media concerned with barriers, boundaries and constraints, both physical and not.

​That formed the basis for my Chains Unlinked show at the Art Gallery of Mississauga, the mural portion is pictured here. It was also the origin of my 'Containment' installation at In Situ in 2016, particularly the drawers-turned-to-lightboxes, with solitary figures and faces inside, like the one shown here.

What do you think, what connections do you see? Did you see either show? Please let me know in the comments below.
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Ydessa Hendeles at The Power Plant.
Examples of my Boxed In figures above and below.
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Boxed In #21 (mural) 2015 | Photo: Tony Hafkenscheid
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One of many drawer-lightboxes from ‘Containment’ 2016
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Whether Art or Ornament, the Universal Fascination of Miniatures

8/20/2017

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Whether you have a long-dormant love of model railroads or can't resist dollhouses and their tiny furnishings, you're far from alone in loving miniatures. I grew up with my own dollhouse made of printed steel, but rather jealous of my cousin who had a big table in his basement devoted to his model railroad, set in a landscape he'd made and populated by exquisitely detailed buildings and street scenes.

A couple of years ago in pursuit of materials for some miniature projects (still on the drawing board) I visited, on my friend Fred's recommendation, The Credit Valley Railway Company, a truly amazing place with aisle upon aisle of trains, other vehicles, and buildings of different eras, human figures, street furniture, vegetation – even different kinds of grasses! Investigating those aisles was such an engrossing way to spend a couple of afternoons.

Plenty of artists love miniatures, miniature painting is quite a tradition, particularly in south Asia and Iran to my knowledge, but some artists either create dimensional miniatures or use the kind I drooled over at the store as their raw material.

Sculptor Kim Adams, 2014 winner of a Governor General's Award in Visual Art (click to view his award page), is one such artist whose work I particularly admire. His elaborate installations a few years ago at the Art Gallery of Ontario (click to view a slideshow from that work) were fascinating.
What got me thinking about this topic recently was an article in The Guardian about sculptor/miniature artist Randy Hage who has done a whole series in which he has re-created old New York City storefronts with amazing detail, right down to the litter, the papered-over windows and the inevitable graffiti.

​On his site (click to link to it) you can see side-by-side comparison photos of the shot he took of the actual storefront and his 1/12 scale miniature. Beautiful work! Below is a time-lapse as he makes one storefront “Ideal Hosiery”.
Finally there's an epic miniature museum project in Mississauga/Oakville called Our Home & Miniature Land where they are painstakingly re-creating Canada in miniature, starting with Toronto and Hamilton. Click here or on their name to check out their site. The project is not complete yet, though they have had a public open house, but the videos of their progress are amazing! Below are a couple of samples to whet your appetite. I can't wait to see it all in person!
How about you? Are you a miniatures geek whether secretly or proudly? Did you have a dollhouse or model railroad when you were growing up, or make other kinds of models?

​If so, please tell me about them in the comments below!
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Report: Live Painting Demo at My 'RADIANTS' Exhibition

5/21/2017

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We had an enthusiastic group at Saturday's painting demonstration at Otto Art gallery in Toronto. I showed how I approach painting two series: my 'Aroundeds' and the 'Radiants' series that gave the show its title.  I will continue to work on the 'Radiant' demo painting and post photo updates here when ready.
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Here I am just starting the demo of painting #2 which is part of the Radiants series.
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First stroke is complete and I'm listening to a question from the audience.
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Radiant #12? It will be if my continued work on it turns out all right!

Sandra Otto, the gallerist, shot video of most of the event, which you can watch below in two parts.

As for the 'Arounded' painting, here are progress shots of the drying process so you can see how the painting reveals itself over time as it dries. I will continue to post more until it is pretty much 100% clear.
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Fresh! The wet new 'Arounded' painting.
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Several hours later the thinnest parts are already starting to clarify.
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Two days + some hours later, more drying progress: still plenty of white but it's less opaque than before.
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Four days + some hours after the demo and you can see translucency in all of the gel. The thickest parts will take more time, the thinnest are totally clear and there is lots that's in-between.
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Here is a detail view after four days.
Please check back for even more updates/photos and links!
And if you found this at all interesting, please give this post a like or a tweet – it helps a lot, thanks!
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Watching Paint Dry Is Fun (Really!)

5/16/2017

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Last week I gave a talk with a demonstration component to members of the Oshawa Art Association. My main demo was of the process I use to make my 'Arounded' acrylic paintings. A magical part of the process is watching the painting emerge as the paint dries.

At the talk I promised that I would share photos of the drying process because the changes are so dramatic as the gel portion dries, due to the nature of acrylics: when wet, the gel or mediums are milky white; they dry clear (more or less, depending on medium and other factors).

Spots with the very thickest applications can take a considerable time to dry fully. Extremely thick applications done all at once may never truly clarify.

Although there are small remaining gel "peaks" that are not yet clear, this sequence gives you a good look at the drying effects over time.
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#1: 'Arounded' painting a few hours after the demo on May 10. Virtually all of the acrylic gel is still wet & white.
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#4: 'Arounded' painting on May 14, a further 35 hours after the demo. Only the thickest spots of the gel layer remain white(ish).
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#2: 'Arounded' painting on May 12, more than 18 hours after the demo. All the thinner areas have clarified.
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Detail of #4: 'Arounded' painting May 14.
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#3: 'Arounded' painting on May 13 – an additional 25 hours after the demo. The centre has mostly clarified (dried).
If you'd like to be kept informed of future events like this talk and demo in Oshawa, please subscribe to my email Update newsletter using the form at right or my contact form above, including the word "subscribe" at the top.
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Spring Returns (along with this blog) – A New Artwork

4/17/2017

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Spring Returns by Kim Lee Kho, photo-digital, 2017. Prints up to 8.5 x 25.5".
It is Spring, at last. Today has bloomed sunny, full of the busy singing of birds, scrabbling of squirrels.

The trees have fat buds just on the verge but not yet open, meaning we can see the blue sky through graceful networks of branches.

I am recovering from bronchitis, and after my first good night's sleep (and despite my sore ribs) I was moved to make this new photo-digital image “Spring Returns”. It makes me think of cherry and plum blossoms, with the promise (or threat) of spring rain in the clouds behind.

The detail views allow you a closer look.

​Happy Spring everyone!


UPCOMING EXHIBITION:
I have a spring solo show of paintings May 8–20 at Otto Art in The Junction neighbourhood in Toronto, so if you've been waiting for a show in a more central part of the city, this is the one! 
​For more details click here.
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Spring Returns by Kim-Lee Kho, detail view 1.
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Spring Returns by Kim-Lee Kho, detail view 2.
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Happy New Year 2017!

1/4/2017

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May we all shine our light a little brighter and spread a little more love this year.
Thanks so much for your interest, enthusiasm and support, it means a lot.
​Wishing you (and your family) all the best in 2017.
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Happy New Year 2017! Photos: above, © Kal Honey 2016 www.kalhoney.ca; below, Kim Lee Kho 2016.
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Why You'll Find My Head in the Clouds So Often

12/30/2016

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It's taken me a long time but I realize now why my head is – and has always been – in the clouds:
I am building immense, elaborate, yet delicate, idea-mansions up there. 
Over time I hope I'll be able to share a lot more of them with you!
​


(By clicking the 'Blue Sky' image you'll be able to see it incorporated into a found object that became part of the 'Containment' installation.)

If you would like to make a contribution to help bring some portion of those mansions to life (even $5 or $10 helps!) please click below and accept my heartfelt thanks.
Help bring my "mansions" to life via PayPal
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Sometimes even my work is in the clouds, not just my head! Blue Sky photo-digital image (2016) by Kim Lee Kho, which formed part of the Blue Sky 3-D piece within my Containment installation at In Situ this Fall. Click on the image to see an installation view.
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Which Comes First: the Artwork or the Space?

10/13/2016

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For the past several weeks I have been working on a new, ambitious installation for In Situ, an event I wrote about in more detail here (click to open).

What I want to focus on in this post is the relationship between artworks and their space, in a deeper sense than "does this painting go with my couch?"

I leapt at the chance to be part of In Situ even though it would cost me money I don't have, even though there was not enough time to prepare, all because of the space!

​Soaring ceilings, tiny welder's booths, classic windows, exposed pipes, industrial fixtures, peeling paint... what's not to love?
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Part of the main factory space at the Small Arms Building in Mississauga, Ontario, where the In Situ arts festival will be held Oct 27, 28 and 29, 2016. All photo by me, Kim-Lee Kho, except as indicated.
The Small Arms Building is a wonderful network of spaces in a gorgeous state of neglect, the perfect location to stage artworks (not just visual but also performance-based) that relate to this remarkable, untamed space.

As an artist working on projects in an imaginative-but-real world, I wear a number of hats. I put a couple on right away when first touring the space: the Practical Hat (the one that wants me to sleep 8 hours every night, not get up to my eyeballs in debt, see my friends and family more often and regularly, eat well and work out, you know the one) – it thinks about what work I already have that could work in this space; the Dreamer Hat looks at the vast potential of all the spaces in the building and imagines a fantastic array of mostly-impossible (for me in these circumstances at least) ways to transform them and create remarkable experiences.

I am grateful to both Hats: one for keeping me alive (more or less, depending!); the other for enticing me to stretch and attempt things that while less-than-sensible have been glorious to thinking about, to see realized, to watch people interact with and to talk with some of them about.
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Visitors looking at 'Double Happiness, Three's a Crowd' giant scrolls (another gloriously immoderate project) which I showed at the Clarke Hall event in Port Credit earlier this year. They had previously only been shown in the Vancouver area. Photo-digital mixed media printed onto fabric and fashioned into scrolls, 16ft x 4ft each. Photo: Sandra Robson 2016
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"My" room at the Small Arms Building for the In Situ festival. I will have other pieces elsewhere in the building as well.
The photo above shows the space that will be all mine (insert evil laugh here). The room is 20ft by 50ft. A dance performance and its audience will need a pathway through it to the next room, but allowing for that I can do what I want!

At right (I hope it's that way for mobile users as well) is a shot showing a fraction of the drawers I have collected or had set aside for me so I can build my main new sculpture. I won't really know until they are in the space how many I will need, which is part of the fun (and also part of what tells me I have fully transitioned to being an artist now, as my designer self would have wanted to control every detail in advance!). 

In addition to drawers and boxes, I will be working with a lot of photo-digital image transfers, plexiglass and light. This work's roots are my 'Boxed In' figure drawings from 2010 and it will connect up to all of the 'Subject to Limitation' thematic work since.

I will be showing a few existing pieces, one reconfigured specifically for the space it will be in (not pictured here). One of the others has only been shown in BC back in 2012: "Turbulence" a 21ft long photo-digital mixed media piece comprised of six angled panels that will be hung high and look down on the people below. It should suit the main space very well!

So in answer to the question posed in the title of this post: both. I've had the idea for the drawers portion of the main sculpture piece for a few years now but other aspects of the installation that it will be part of were inspired by the context. Also the actual configuration and some of the details of the sculpture are responses to the space and particularities of the event.

​
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Drawers galore! Here is just a small sampling of all the drawers I'll be using for my main sculpture piece at 'In Situ'. Photos: Kim-Lee Kho
I make my work to be shared. With you.
Which is why, even as a one-woman operation, I do my best to share via my blog, social media and email newsletter.
Because I know everything I make is part of a larger story. Every thought I have as an artist is an opportunity to build meaning and to connect.

If you would like to support my projects – for as little as $10 or more – just click the link below and please accept my heartfelt thanks.

paypal.me/kimleekho
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Preparations Underway

7/8/2016

1 Comment

 
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Hope you had a great holiday weekend (if you're in North America at least).

​I'm currently buried deep in preparations for the Acrylics: Explore, Express & Experiment course I teach every summer in Haliburton. So much still to do, not enough time to write a proper post, but I thought I would share a sample panel-in-progress with you (pictured above).

​I will update this post with the finished result... after the pour! Should be fun, fingers crossed :-)
Sample panel-in-progress by Kim Lee Kho 2016.
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Three Giant Scrolls Get an Airing

6/28/2016

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Above: Standing in front of "Double Happiness, Three's a Crowd" scrolls at Art-Spread in Port Credit, June 18/19. Photo by Sandra Robson.

Top left: Drawing Louis Armstrong for the #dailyheroes series live at the same event, with another artist's (Nisreen's) drawing of an imaginary face showing in the foreground. Photo by Meena Chopra.
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Left: Louis Armstrong drawing completed. I chose a serious photo of him to work from because his glorious smile so easily overshadows the man's genuine genius.


It was a busy and fun weekend in Port Credit (Mississauga) on June 18 and 19 at Art-Spread where I was one of over a dozen artists/artisans showing and demonstrating what I do. 
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Lots of people I know came to visit (only one had ever seen the scrolls live before), and if you were one of them, thank you.
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Below: The scrolls provided a focal point for the whole show in that vaulted space. Photo by Sandra Robson.
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Left: The whole group of us! Photo courtesy Sandra Robson.
This was the first time the scrolls had been on display in four years! I have fresh ideas on where I might exhibit them next. If you have any suggestions, please let me know in the comments below or via my contact form in the menu above.
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    Kim-Lee Kho

    As a visual artist I like nothing more than getting up to my elbows in paint or little plastic toys, or wading in at the deep end in pursuit of an idea. When I am not teaching others in a similar vein, you can find me researching, writing and noodling around in my studio, seeing where my latest lines of inquiry lead me.

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  • Home
  • Gallery
    • Lifelines Collection >
      • Trees in Motion 5 (Winter Night)
      • Spring Returns
      • Cutting Edge
      • Glow 2
      • Hidden Complexity
      • Snowdance 1
      • Snowdance Among the Trees
      • Left and Right
      • Untitled (Blue and White)
      • Branching Radials 2
    • 2025 Facial Expressions
    • Burnt Offerings (2023)
    • My Father's Things (series)
    • Burnt Offerings (2022) >
      • Sponsors: Thank you
    • A Full Heart
    • Heartspace
    • Subject to Limitation >
      • Boxed In
      • Expanding Media
      • Fences as Barriers
      • Containment
    • Skin
    • Face[t]s
    • [Un]Settled
    • Digital / Photo / Mixed
    • Painting
    • To See More
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