Yu Jihye
Walking on Air, 2022
Acrylic paint, Hanji (Korean paper) , Fabric & textile, Mixed media, Stone (marble, soapstone)
130 x 1540 x cm
Unique work
Certificate of authenticity included
US$2,100
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About the work
- Materials
- Acrylic paint, Hanji (Korean paper), Fabric & textile, Mixed media, Stone (marble, soapstone)
- Dimensions
- 130 x 1540 cm
- Frame
- Frame not included
- Signature
- Unsigned
- Certificate Of Authenticity
- Certificate included
Walking on Air, an installation by Yu Jihye, captures a suspended moment—a gesture caught between movement and stillness. Two white boots rest atop a vivid blue cylinder, as if someone has just leapt or paused mid-step. The body is absent, yet its trace remains, evoking an invisible presence and an unfinished action. The work’s material contrasts heighten its quiet tension: the boots, with their rough, hand-formed texture; the smooth, artificial sheen of the blue cylinder; and the raw, exposed concrete at one end. These disparate elements coexist in delicate imbalance, creating a sculptural harmony that feels both precarious and precise. The act of “walking” usually implies grounding, but here, it becomes a floating gesture—disconnected from earth, reaching toward the sky. The piece invites sensations of gravity and drift, of weight and weightlessness, as if caught in the space between a leap and a fall. By juxtaposing the mundane act of walking with the ethereal image of sky, Yu conjures a poetic state of in-between. The work becomes a metaphor for longing—for transcendence, for freedom—and for the fragile constructions of identity that emerge when certainty gives way to suspension. Walking on Air is both an image of halted motion and a sculptural embodiment of emotional gravity, balancing dreamlike levitation with the inescapable pull of reality.
About the artist
Yu Jihye is an artist based in Daejeon, South Korea, whose work begins with an exploration of the sensory and contradictory state that exists before form and meaning fully emerge. Her practice often stems from the materiality of substances and the residual traces of sensation that surround them. She carefully selects organic and imperfect materials such as cotton, paper pulp, and fabric, and sensitively perceives and experiments with their physical and tactile properties. The loosely entangled texture of cotton appears both alive and lifeless, while the hardened forms of paper pulp suggest bodily movements through soft curves or twisted lines. In this way, opposing qualities—softness and strength, vitality and lifelessness—collide and intersect in her work, ultimately forming a new kind of harmony. Rather than suppressing these contradictions, Yu embraces them as a source of life force. The surfaces of her works often appear worn down or partially erased, like the remains of memory, evoking sensations that are neither fully narrated nor restored. Instead of depicting memory as a coherent narrative, she focuses on how it drifts through the body and the senses, how it resurfaces, and how it reorganizes itself into a new sensory order. Her exploration of “contradictory harmony” and the “potential for new vitality” metaphorically reflects the hybrid and artificial nature of contemporary life, revealing complex layers of perception beyond any singular message. These broken or reassembled structures reveal gaps and collisions, yet remain vividly alive—like internal movements refusing to be still. In this way, her work affirms suppressed impulses and embraces chaos, reflecting an artistic stance that generates renewed vitality from the residues of sensation.