| Frame | Framed in Acrylic |
|---|---|
| Artwork Type | Original Paint |
| Gallery | Sarah |
| width and height | 16 x 12 |
| Material | hanji , Korean traditional painting pigment, mica mineral pigment, ink, abalone seashell slices, sharpie pen, ink |
| Year of Creation | 2026 |
The Sound and Color Fugue: Visualization of Sound
$2,200.00
This work is a contemporary visualization of sound, where I treat the acts of painting and listening as interconnected parts of a single spiritual resonance. The entire composition is a direct response to Kandinsky’s famous statement, which I’ve found deeply moving: “Color is the keyboard, the eyes are the hammers, the soul is the piano with many strings.” This principle is the heart of my creation. I believe each color functions like a single musical note, our vision acts as the tactile sensor, and the internal vibration we feel when viewing a piece of art is the resonance of our inner soul.
The central figure, a black chicken, is seated, engrossed in a score—not to play, but to visualize and contain the internal resonance. For the entire tone, composition, and a sense of quiet restraint and silence, I drew inspiration from James Whistler’s Arrangement in Grey and Black. It is within this controlled, Whistler-esque silence that I wanted the sound to manifest.
The floor, starting with the recognizable piano keys and descending into a complex, deep checkerboard pattern, represents the architectural structure of music expanding and descending into space. I wanted to express the deep architectural, yet deeply personal, immersion I felt recently when listening to Bach’s Toccata & Fugue. Years ago, this piece felt purely melancholic, but now it has become a source of profound, complex comfort. This feeling was mirrored by my recent readings of Shakespeare’s tragedies—Macbeth, Hamlet, and especially Othello—where I confronted the complex, dark emotions of human existence, which I sought to weave into the visual fabric.







