Upcoming exhibition at Tina Kim Gallery: Lee Seung Jio's Nucleus in Resonance
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Upcoming exhibition at Tina Kim Gallery: Lee Seung Jio's Nucleus in Resonance
Lee Seung Jio, Nucleus 74-07, 1974. Oil on canvas, 57 1/8 x 57 1/8 in. 145 x 145 cm.



NEW YORK, NY.- Tina Kim Gallery will present Lee Seung Jio: Nucleus in Resonance, on view from September 18 through November 1, 2025. Marking the gallery’s second solo exhibition of Lee Seung Jio (1941– 1990), a leading figure in postwar Korean geometric abstraction, this presentation surveys Lee’s defining Nucleus series, which he explored consistently from the late 1960s to his final decade. For Lee, the nucleus was more than a formal motif; it functioned as a central point of perception, where energy, rhythm, and sensory experience came together.

“I began this [painting] after the launch of the Apollo spacecraft opened my eyes to the spatiality of the universe. It feels like the most fitting way to express the era I live in, so I’ve kept working on it ever since.”1

During Korea’s rapid industrialization and urban expansion in the 1960s, Lee turned to a single, enduring motif: the cylindrical pipe form. Lee’s pipes are both abstract and figurative, existing as two-dimensional planes and three-dimensional forms. Although often referred to as the “master of pipes,” Lee once noted that he neither sought nor rejected the label. For him, the repeated cylindrical form was never intended to represent any symbolic object; rather, it served to expose the illusions inherent in visual perception and to question the premise of figurative representation. Through this process, Lee aimed to depict a sensuous realm stripped of symbolic meaning—a world of “sheer particles,” as he described it.

As a founding member of the groups ORIGIN (1962–) and AG (Korean Avant-Garde Association, 1969–1975), Lee helped establish the theoretical and methodological foundations of postwar Korean art. Even though his work was often associated with movements such as Mono-ha, Minimalism, and Dansaekhwa at the time, Lee developed a distinct visual language characterized by precision, restraint, and structural clarity. As Joan Kee has observed, Lee’s work reveals how he critically engaged with contemporary abstraction—a mode in which sociohistorical conditions are transformed into rigorous compositional structures.2

The earliest work in the exhibition, Nucleus 10 (1968), was first shown at the 12th Contemporary Art Exhibit at Gyeongbokgung Palace Museum. The painting marks the beginning of Lee’s signature motif—a tubular form. This vocabulary finds fuller articulation in Nucleus 74-9 (1968–1974), in which the pipe motif becomes the organizing framework of the entire composition. To achieve the illusion of metallic density, Lee applied oil paint with a flat brush loaded with light and dark tones at either end, then meticulously sanded the surface—burnishing the paint to heighten its reflectivity and optical depth. Featured in Only the Young: Experimental Art in Korea, 1960s–1970s—co-organized by the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Korea and the Guggenheim Museum— the work affirms Lee’s growing significance within Korean modernism.

Lee continued to experiment with iterations of the Nucleus and develop his formal vocabulary throughout the 1970s and 1980s. Nucleus 73-18 (1973) and Nucleus 74-07 (1974) demonstrate his continued inquiry into the nature of perception, while reflecting a more subtle visual language grounded in the distilled and process-driven aesthetics of the time. Works from the 1980s—represented here by Nucleus 88- 10 (1988), Nucleus 86-71 (1986), and the monumental Nucleus 87-99 (1987) demonstrate his sustained pursuit of structural rigor, while simultaneously drawing the viewer into contemplative, illusionistic spaces that transcend the material surface of the canvas.

The exhibition concludes with the first U.S. presentation of Lee’s black paintings, including Nucleus 78-23, 78-24, 78-25 and 78-26 (all 1978). For Lee, black was not merely a color but a fundamental space of silence, stillness, and emptiness—where all elements were reduced to their origin. In Lee’s vocabulary, the nucleus signified not only the structural core of the image but a condensed field of visual and sensory perception. These works represent the culmination of his decades-long exploration of abstraction, characterized by their emphasis on materiality and process. Lee’s black paintings draw the viewer into a contemplative space where being and form quietly converge, embodying his pursuit of abstraction’s essential condition.

Lee Seung Jio (1941–1990) was born in Yongcheon, Pyeonganbuk-do, Korea. He entered the Department of Painting at Hongik University in 1960 and, alongside fellow students such as Choi Myoung-Young and Suh Seung-Won, co-founded the ORIGIN group in 1962—an artist collective dedicated to a return to the purity of form. In the late 1960s, Lee began to develop his signature vocabulary of cylindrical, pipe-like forms, cultivating a singular mechanical aesthetic within the trajectory of Korean geometric abstraction.

Throughout the 1970s, Lee was regularly invited to major avant-garde and experimental exhibitions in Korea, including the Indépendants (1st, 4th–7th), École de Seoul (1st–8th, 11th–12th), Seoul Contemporary Art Festival, Daegu Contemporary Art Festival, Busan Contemporary Art, and Gwangju Contemporary Art. He also actively participated in key international exhibitions such as the São Paulo Biennale (1971, 1977), the International Painting Exhibition in Cagnes-sur-Mer, France (1974, 1979), Korean Contemporary Art: A Cross Section at Tokyo Central Museum (1977), and Contemporary Korean Art at the Taipei Fine Arts Museum (1984). Following his passing in 1990, Lee was the subject of major retrospectives at Ho-Am Gallery (1991), Gallery Hyundai (1996), Total Museum of Contemporary Art (1996), and Busan Museum of Art (2010). His posthumous presence continued with Origin at Ilju & Sunhwa Gallery (2010), a solo exhibition at Galerie Perrotin, Paris (2016), and a solo show at Tina Kim Gallery, New York (2020). In 2020, marking the 30th anniversary of his death, the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art (MMCA) held a major retrospective titled Lee Seung Jio: Advancing Columns. He was also featured in The Geometry of Korean Modern Art at MMCA Gwacheon in 2023. From 2023 to 2024, Lee’s work was included in Only the Young: Experimental Art in Korea, 1960s–1970s, a joint touring exhibition organized by MMCA and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York.

His works are held in the collections of The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York; National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Korea; Seoul Museum of Art; Busan Museum of Art; Leeum, Samsung Museum of Art; Museum SAN; Total Museum of Contemporary Art; Hongik University Museum; Sookmyung Women’s University Museum; and the Wooran Foundation.



1 Lee Seung Jio, “Presenting the Nucleus Series with Cold Lines and Blazes of Fire,” interview with Maeil Business Newspaper, October 24, 1984.

2 Joan Kee, “Force Fields,” in Lee Seung Jio: Advancing Columns (Seoul: National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Korea, 2020), 14-25.










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