Tina Kim Gallery takes on U.S. representation of postwar sculptor Kim Lim
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Tina Kim Gallery takes on U.S. representation of postwar sculptor Kim Lim
Kim Lim working on Twice (1966), 1968. Courtesy the Estate of Kim Lim. © The Lewinski Archive at Chatsworth. All Rights Reserved 2023 / Bridgeman Images.



NEW YORK, NY.- Tina Kim Gallery announced its U.S. representation of the Estate of Kim Lim, a Singaporean-British sculptor and printmaker whose work constitutes a vital yet historically underrecognized contribution to postwar abstraction. Working in London from the 1950s until her death in 1997, Lim (1936–1997) developed a distinctive practice shaped by an unusually wide range of cultural and historical references and marked by a formal rigor that places her in direct dialogue with the defining sculptors of her generation. The gallery will debut her work at Art Basel, Switzerland, this June and present a solo exhibition in spring 2027, marking the first solo presentation of her work in the U.S.

In a practice that stretched across four decades, Lim combined the seriality and restraint of Minimalism with an organic modulation and transcultural sensibility that set her apart from her contemporaries. Shaped by a life lived between Singapore, London, and extensive travels across Asia, Europe, North Africa, and the Americas, her work drew on a wide-ranging visual and intellectual inheritance that she translated into an abstract language of clarity and nuance. Her sculptural forms—less industrial than those of her Minimalist peers and more attuned to touch, rhythm, and historical resonance—articulate a distinct position within postwar sculpture. That her work largely slipped from view after her death in 1997, and is only now beginning to receive sustained international attention, reflects the narrowness with which the global art canon has historically been drawn.

Born in Singapore in 1936 to Chinese parents, Lim spent part of her childhood in Japanese-occupied Malaysia before returning to Singapore for her schooling. In 1954, at age seventeen, she moved to London to study at Saint Martin’s School of Art, where she trained under Anthony Caro and Elisabeth Frink. When Caro, then still working in a figurative mode, pushed back against her early forays into abstraction, it was Frink who encouraged her to transfer to the Slade School of Fine Art, where her experiments with abstract form found more fertile ground. At the Slade, she pursued sculpture alongside printmaking, a dual engagement that remained central to her practice throughout her career. During this time, she was introduced to sculptor William Turnbull, whom she married after graduating in 1960; the two shared a deep admiration for Constantin Brancusi, whose commitment to essential form—reducing sculpture to its most fundamental shapes and privileging material, proportion, and spatial harmony—became a touchstone for Lim’s own work. She believed, as Brancusi did, that sculpture should be “silent and succinct,” providing the viewer “a whole experience without having to be explored or analysed.”

Lim and Turnbull travelled extensively across Asia, North Africa, Europe, and the Americas from the 1960s through the 1980s, frequently visiting museums, monuments, and archaeological sites—experiences Lim characterized as her “main art education.” Formative encounters with Cycladic figures in Greece and ancient Shang bronzes and Han dynasty sculpture in China became enduring points of reference. In her early career, Lim worked primarily in wood, bronze, and steel, often experimenting with modular configurations whose titles drew on mythology, ancient history, and the geographies of her travels. Early works such as Pegasus (1962), Ronin (1963) and Centaur II (1963)—stacked compositions that balance curvilinear and angular elements—demonstrate how she translated these references into a rigorous abstract language, evoking them through rhythm and structure rather than direct representation.

Soon after graduating from the Slade, Lim made her public debut in 26 Young Sculptors at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London, in 1961, and held her first solo exhibition at Axiom Gallery in 1966. That same year, her monumental steel sculpture Day was included in the major sculpture triennial Sculpture in the Open Air at Battersea Park alongside Henry Moore, Barbara Hepworth, Elisabeth Frink, and Anthony Caro, making her one of the youngest participants at age thirty. In 1977, she was the only woman and the only artist from the Global Majority included in the inaugural Hayward Annual, the Hayward Gallery’s annual survey of contemporary British art, and later served on the jury for its second edition.

From the late 1960s onward, Lim’s practice grew increasingly conceptual, shifting away from integral carved forms toward sequences of modular units in which the space between elements carried as much sculptural weight as the forms themselves. Across both sculpture and printmaking, she developed a sustained exploration of rhythm, sequence, and spatial progression. Her Ladder prints from the early 1970s extended her investigation into geometric repetition and incremental change, finding sculptural counterparts in works such as Intervals I and Intervals II (1973), painted wooden structures composed of ascending, rhythmic units. Like Louise Bourgeois and Eva Hesse, Lim approached abstraction as a vehicle for sensation and memory rather than pure formalism, imbuing pared-down structures with an acute sensitivity to the natural world.

A pivotal 1979 retrospective at the Roundhouse Gallery marked a further shift. From this period onward, she worked primarily in stone, turning her attention to natural phenomena such as the movement of water and air. Working without studio assistance—carving alone with hammer and chisel even in her final decades—Lim created works such as Wind-Stone (1992) that distill her practice to its essential terms. In the artist’s words: “My concern in sculpture is not so much for volume, mass, and weight, but rather with form, space, rhythm, and light.”

The gallery’s representation comes at a moment of expanding institutional attention for the artist. Kim Lim: Water Rests, Stone Speaks, a major survey of her sculptures and prints at UCCA Dune, Beidaihe, China—marking her first institutional solo exhibition in mainland China—concluded this spring. It followed retrospectives at National Gallery Singapore (September 27, 2024 – February 2, 2025) and Hepworth Wakefield, UK (November 25, 2023 – June 2, 2024). Kim Lim’s work is held in museum collections around the world, including Tate Britain; M+ (Hong Kong); National Gallery Singapore; Palm Springs Art Museum; the Arts Council Collection and Government Art Collection (UK); and the Middelheim Museum (Belgium), among others.

“Kim Lim was doing something that the art world didn’t yet have the framework to fully absorb at the time: working from a genuinely global sensibility, across sculpture and printmaking, with a formal and conceptual rigor that stands up to anyone in her generation,” says Tina Kim. “A core mission of my program since its founding is to present practices that complicate and expand the postwar canon. Lim is a crucial figure in that reassessment.”










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