This visual essay examines painting as a continuous process of emergence rather than a fixed image. Working with oil paint and charcoal on hand-dyed linen and canvas, I approach the surface as a site where forms appear, dissolve, and reconfigure over time. Darkness functions not as the absence of light, but as a deliberate perceptual condition that slows the act of looking and allows subtle chromatic and textural shifts to become visible. Through layering, scraping, and erasure, the work explores the interaction between viscous paint and light-absorbing charcoal, as well as atmospheric transitions captured through acrylic and pastel on panel. These material conditions give rise to a state of delayed perception, where anonymous figures and fragments hover at the precarious threshold between presence and disappearance. As the image unfolds gradually, visibility remains unstable, requiring sustained attention from the viewer. Ultimately, this essay reflects on how painting can sustain unstable states of being, where existence is most strongly felt at the moment it begins to dissipate, revealing the fragile boundary between appearance and loss.
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Daun Suh
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Daun Suh (Fri,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a13e8d20e02ee3982d33664 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20357647