Dec 29, 2022

Area fiber artist, instructor now at Red Barn Studio Museum

Posted Dec 29, 2022 1:02 PM
<b>Fiber artist Shin-hee Chin.</b> Photo courtesy Lindsborg Convention and Visitors Bureau
Fiber artist Shin-hee Chin. Photo courtesy Lindsborg Convention and Visitors Bureau

Lindsborg Convention and Visitors Bureau

LINDSBORG - Shin-hee Chin, McPherson, is the artist-in-residence at the Red Barn Studio Museum through Jan. 28.

Chin, originally from South Korea, came to the United States in 1988. She has studied in Korea and the United States. Since 2005, she has taught at Tabor College.

Widely known for her fiber art, she was most recently invited to take part in the Women's Voices Summit and exhibition at the Clinton Presidential Center Dec. 1-2

“I attempt to reflect the charm of some of my favorite music in a visual format with fiber art pieces and seek to create a dialogue between them. I believe that art (music, poems, and visual art) can serve as a lens through which we see the complexity, integrity, beauty of human nature and the world,” Shin-hee Chin said. “As Hans Hofmann once wrote, To sense the invisible and to be able to create it, that is art. His statement illustrates invisibility as an essential component of artistic expression.”

To give a visual outlet to that sense, Chin utilized thread as the primary medium on a reclaimed quilt and unraveled thread over the surface. Then she stitched it together randomly and repeated this process multiple times. The process of unraveling thread on the quilted top allowed her to execute free and natural movements, a process that echoes the impression of the transient images and fluidity of reality.

The Raymer Society’s Artist-in-Residence program is sponsored in part by the Kansas Creative Arts Industry Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts.  The museum, 212 S. Main Street, is open 10:30 a.m.-5 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, 1-5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, and by appointment.