Su A Chae | LUX Center for the Arts | Art Gallery, Classes, Summer Camps & Outreach
 

Su A Chae

Su A Chae

Artist
Profile Location
Lincoln , NE
Biography

Su A Chae is a South Korea–born artist currently living and working in. Fayetteville, Arkansas. Chae holds an MFA in Painting from Indiana University Bloomington in Indiana and MA and BA degrees in Business from Ewha Womans University, Seoul in South Korea. She also completed the Tyler School of Art Summer Painting Intensive. Her work has been exhibited nationally and internationally at venues including the Painting Center, Deanna Evans Projects, Ortega y Gasset Projects, Paradise Palace, and Wassaic Project (New York); Gross McCleaf Gallery and Icebox Project Space (Philadelphia); and the Indianapolis Art Center (Indianapolis) among many others. Her work has been featured on platforms such as Young Space and the Hopper Prize (as a finalist), and in publications including New American Paintings, White Hot Magazine, Booooooom, and I Like Your Work. She has participated in residencies at Penland School of Craft, Wassaic Project, Vermont Studio Center, ACRE, and the Kimmel Harding Nelson Center for the Arts. Chae is currently Assistant Professor of Art (Painting) at the University of Arkansas.  

Artist Statement

My paintings explore questions of identity and belonging through balance, negotiating symmetry and visibility. Before turning to art in the United States, I worked in accounting academia in South Korea, where I studied how systems reduce information asymmetry and moral hazard in capital society. That background continues to inform my artistic practice. I use asymmetrical balance and paradoxical spatial arrangements to examine the ambivalence of living between cultures.

The title of this exhibition, Neither Flying nor Crying is adapted from an ancient idiom, bul-bi-bul-myeong (불비불명, 不飛不鳴), which describes a bird that neither flies nor sings for three years, waiting for the right moment to rise. This idea mirrors my own journey as a Korean immigrant woman artist who transitioned from the world of numbers to the world of color in my thirties.

Drawing from lived experience as a “Xennial” moving across cultural contexts, I have developed a visual language of the “in-between.” I play with the interplay of symmetry and asymmetry, the tension between opening and closure, the smooth transition of digital-feel gradations, and the physical texture of molded surfaces.

Subtle references to minhwa (Korean folk painting) frequently appear throughout the work, particularly in the simplified, arched form of the tiger. These animal patterns function as both structural grounding and a narrative presence. Carrying rhythm, repetition, and persistence, they do not resolve the questions of belonging but hold it open—maintaining difference without collapsing complexity. Fragmentation becomes a way to address visibility and endurance. Parts of the tiger remain partially seen, suggesting cycles of revealing and concealing.

In these paintings, balance is not a state of rest, but an ongoing process of resistance and recalibration. Tension, contradiction, and care remain active. Rather than seeking resolution, the works stay upright through sustained balance—neither flying nor crying. 

 

 
 

Exhibitions Featuring this Artist

Aug
07
8/7/26 to 8/29/26

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