Yunchul Kim is a multidisciplinary artist and electroacoustic composer whose work merges science, philosophy, and technology to craft living forms. Born in Seoul in 1970, Kim has earned an international reputation for kinetic fluid forms, immersive installations, sound pieces, drawings, and text works that challenge our understanding of material reality. Key to his practice is “TransMatter,” a poetic and conceptual framework that explores matter in constant motion and transformation.

Kim views materials as active agents with their rhythms and behaviors. This perspective is captured in what he calls “mattereal,” recognizing that matter is vibrant, dynamic, and interconnected with both human and non-human systems. In his own words, it’s about “materiality as a state of turbulence” and about forming new connections with nature, technology, and a renewed sense of humanism.

Chroma: Yunchul Kim’s 15-Meter Kinetic Sculpture of Light
One of Kim’s most acclaimed works, Chroma, is a 15-meter-long parametric knot made up of 320 transparent polymer cells. Each cell interacts with light through photo-elasticity, creating shifting waves of color and shape. Its movements are guided by gravity-driven patterns and cellular automata algorithms, producing a constantly shifting display that feels both engineered and organic. The piece appears to breathe, pulsating like a cosmic organism floating in space. Chroma acts as a bridge between the human sensorium and non-human material flows.

Elliptical Dipole: Immersive Science-Driven Installation in Beijing
In 2024, Kim unveiled Elliptical Dipole: Visceral Particles and Sorcerous Flows at 798CUBE in Beijing—his largest solo exhibition to date. The show featured monumental works such as Triaxial Pillars II, Strata, and Dust of Suns II, blending unconventional painting, light, kinetic mechanics, and sound. The environment created was a seamless fusion of art and science, inviting viewers to experience matter as both a physical and philosophical force. These works reflect Kim’s belief that the visible world is only one layer of a much more complex reality.


Other Notable Works: Fluid Kinetic and Sound-Driven Art Installations
Cascade – Made during residencies at CERN (the European Organization for Nuclear Research) and FACT Liverpool, Cascade is a fluid-kinetic sculpture composed of long acrylic tubes. Inside, photonic fluids circulate in continuous loops, evoking the flow of subatomic particles and the poetry of physics.

C-Ray – Combining chemistry and sound art, C-Ray transforms a chemical reactor into a synthesizer. By amplifying the electrical currents of seawater through an aluminum surface, Kim turns invisible chemical processes into audible compositions.

Why Yunchul Kim’s TransMatter Art Resonates in Today’s World
In a time when environmental crises and technological progress are reshaping the relationship with the material world, Kim’s work feels especially relevant. He dissolves traditional boundaries between art and science, the human and the non-human, perception and hidden reality. His sculptures, installations, and compositions depict phenomena, transforming exhibitions into laboratories of wonder where audiences witness the agency of matter itself.


Kim’s practice reveals unseen forces that animate our universe: cosmic radiation, magnetic fields, particle flows, and chemical reactions. By translating these forces into sensory experiences, he invites us to slow down, observe, and engage with the “aliveness” of the material world. His art shows that everything is part of an intricate network of energies and transformations.

Yunchul Kim creates encounters with fundamental processes of existence. His works serve as both philosophical statements and sensory spectacles, reminding us that matter is never still, and neither are we.

Want to explore kinetic form-making and computational flow like Kim’s art? Dive in with PAACADEMY’s “Fluid Forms: Geometry Rationalization with Maya & Rhino3D” or “Dynamic Sketching: AI-Powered Architecture” workshops to master living, material dynamics in design.”
Image Courtesy Yunchul Kim.
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