Work samples

  • Selfie Mirror
    Selfie Mirror
    “The 5th edition of CURRENTS presents an exhibition in which artists respond to the theme of ABORTION. In this turbulent moment in history, abortion remains a signifier of people's ownership over their bodies, being as urgent a subject as any of the issues that now consume us.” Barbara Zucker, Curator, Currents: Abortion, A.I.R. Gallery, Brooklyn, NY
  • Why
    “This knowledge engine was at play when the artist Julia Kim Smith took to Google in 2013 [2012] in order to produce the 1 min. video loop titled Why....When such algorithms are applied to a group of people, especially a minority, the presumed objectivity inherent in the search sanctifies the anticipated result as simply true. We’re left with the question: does the action of the masses constitute truth?” Lisa Moren, Curator, Washington Project for the Arts, Experimental Media 2013: Cyber In Securities
  • The Real Wi-Fi Of Baltimore (Are U Connected?)
    2022 A.I.R. Gallery, A.I.R. Currents: Identity Politics, Brooklyn, NY; 2017 Official Selection Slamdance Film Festival–Featuring the genre-busting talent of James Nasty and TT the Artist, The Real Wi-Fi Of Baltimore offers a punny and nuanced view of Baltimore neighborhoods in a short film edited from iPhone screenshots of Wi-Fi network names. The Real Wi-Fi Of Baltimore poses this challenge: Are we connected?
  • Receipts
    Receipts
    “A binary condition of ‘American meaning non-Asian’ is no longer valid. If colonial mimicry comes from the appropriation of the Other, postmodern mimicry of immigrant artists appears when displaced souls realize a cacophony of conflicting values and cultural hegemonies.” Kyunghee Pyun, “From Immigrant to Transnational: Nostalgia for an Imagined Homeland,” Time Zone Converter, Korean Cultural Center, Beijing (image courtesy Sebastian Bach)

About Julia

Julia Kim Smith is a multidisciplinary artist whose work has been featured by Angry Asian Man, Animal, Art F City, artnet News, Baltimore Magazine, The Baltimore SunGQ, Hypebeast, Hyperallergic, Juxtapoz, kottke.org, Ms.Paper Magazine, The Atlantic, The Washington Post, and international media outlets. Her films have received premieres at Slamdance Film… more

6 FT EVIL EYE MASK

I created 6 FT EVIL EYE MASK in 2020 for MASKerade Baltimorefundraiser hosted by the Baltimore Community Foundation's LGBTQ Fund and Maryland Art Place to raise awareness and funds for issues facing the LGBTQ community in Baltimore. Both BCF and MAP are non-profits that I support.
 
I was interested in the way MASKerade encouraged artists to explore masks as form and fashion, and as political and social signifiers. As the daughter of Korean immigrants in the US, I have a long, self-preserving interest in fashion as social signifier. In the groundbreaking book Minor Feelings: An Asian American Reckoning, Cathy Park Hong touched on this role of fashion when she wrote about David Dao, the Asian-American doctor who was brutalized and dragged off the United flight in 2017. She compared his black Patagonia sweater and khaki cap to camouflage, code for “I am not one to take up space or make a scene.” Horrifying because he looked like Dad to many of us.
 
I can see parallels between how the Asian community has been scapegoated for COVID and how the gay community was scapegoated for AIDS…. 6 FT EVIL EYE MASK does not blend in. The mask takes up space and makes a scene. Inspired by Met Gala gowns, voguing, and Rupaul’s Drag Race, I tried to create a mask with bling that demands us to look and pay attention.

EXHIBITION

Maryland Art Place, Baltimore, MD, 2020
MASKerade: Benefit for Baltimore Community Foundation’s LGBTQ Fund

PRESS
Hypotheses, International Council of Museums research blog, Romane James, “Clothing the Pandemic,” April 2023

  • 6 FT EVIL EYE MASK
    6 FT EVIL EYE MASK
    Fabric mask, tape measures, embroidered evil eye patch, spray paint, enamel evil eye pin; hand-stitched and assembled, collection of Steve Ziger
  • 6 FT EVIL EYE MASK
    6 FT EVIL EYE MASK
    Fabric mask, tape measures, embroidered evil eye patch, spray paint, enamel evil eye pin; hand-stitched and assembled, collection of Steve Ziger

American As Fuck

American As Fuck appropriates phrases typically associated with the right-wing and explores the boundaries and intersectionality of what it means to be an American and a patriot.

EXHIBITION
Museum of Craft and Design, San Francisco, CA, 2021
Call & Response: Craft as a Tool for Activism

Curators: Glenn Adamson, Ebitenyefa Baralaye, Nate Watson

PUBLICATION
Printed Matter, New York, NY 2020


Cancelled Collective Actions Open Letter
The New York Times, Zachary Small “The Whitney Canceled Their Exhibition. Now Those Artists Want Reform.”, September 17, 2020
 

  • American As Fuck
    American As Fuck
    Laser-cut oil board, spray paint, 15 x 44"
  • American As Fuck
    American As Fuck
    Laser-cut oil board, spray paint, 15 x 44", collection of Thomas R. Akras
  • American As Fuck
    American As Fuck
    Laser-cut oil board, spray paint, 15 x 22"
  • American As Fuck
    American As Fuck
    Laser-cut oil board, spray paint, 15 x 22"
  • American As Fuck
    American As Fuck
    Printed Matter, downloadable protest poster, 8.5 x 11"

Baltimore, Actually, I like it.

Think locally, act locally.

Sticker, T-shirt, and bookmark made in Baltimore: created and designed by Julia Kim Smith, printed by Momentum and Indigo Ink, and sold exclusively at Atomic Books and Sideshow at The American Visionary Art Museum. Every sticker, T-shirt, and bookmark makes an impact: We donate 100% of profits to the Enoch Pratt Free Library.

The limited edition postcard, commissioned by the The Creative Alliance and printed by Typecast Press, is available in an edition of 200, each signed and numbered by the artist. Text on front reads “Baltimore: Actually, I like it.”; text on back reads “Dearest_______,” to be completed by the sender.

PRESS
Baltimore: Actually, I like it. spotted in NYT: John Waters's Baltimore, July 1, 2024
Baltimore: Actually, I like it. spotted in novels: John Waters’ Liarmouth: A Feel-Bad Romance!, 2022, and Matthew Norman’s Charm City Rocks: A Love Story, 2023
Duff Goldman Instagram feed, July 27, 2019
Duff Goldman Instagram feed, March 12, 2019
Baltimore Creatives Instagram feed, January 3, 2019
American Visionary Art Museum Instagram feed

“A trending unofficial civic slogan declares ‘Baltimore: Actually, I Like It,’ which best captures the mix of resignation and defensiveness that comes from residing in a place long synonymous with what’s wrong with American cities. This may never be a Portlandia-style urban playground, but the raggedy pleasures of Baltimore living are real and durable, and can be found no where else. That’s why we’re here, and why we stay, even though sometimes we all feel like tearing the place down.”
Grist, David Dudley, “Why Baltimore is fighting for its life, again,” April 2015

  • Baltimore: Actually, I like it.
    Baltimore: Actually, I like it.

    Weather-resistant vinyl sticker, 3 x 9" (NEW! Small, 2 x 7" sticker now at Atomic Books!)

  • Baltimore: Actually, I like it.
    Baltimore: Actually, I like it.
    T-shirt—White Plastisol ink screen printed on 100% cotton, Size: XS-XXXL, Printer: Momentum
  • Baltimore, Actually, I like it.
    Baltimore, Actually, I like it.
    Bookmark—Black ink on Mohawk Superfine FSC Mix, Ultra White, Eggshell 120# cover, 2 x 7", Press: Indigo Ink
  • Baltimore: Actually, I like it.
    Baltimore: Actually, I like it.
    Limited edition postcard—Foil-stamped, triplexed Keaykolour 111# cover and Rising Museum Board, with edge painting and gray envelope (not shown), 6 x 4.25 x 0.15" Edition of 200 signed and number by artist, Press: Mary Mashburn, Typecast Press
  • Baltimore: Actually, I like it.
    Baltimore: Actually, I like it.
    Limited edition postcard—Foil-stamped, triplexed Keaykolour 111# cover and Rising Museum Board, with edge painting and gray envelope (not shown), 6 x 4.25 x 0.15" Edition of 200 signed and number by artist, Press: Mary Mashburn, Typecast Press

Concrete Poetry 2

Concrete Poetry 2 is an interactive outdoor installation of 100 free-standing cast concrete letters placed on a platform of concrete pavers. Visitors to The Ivy Bookshop’s gardens are welcome to move the letters and compose poetry. On occasion, work by noted authors is featured.

Since opening in May 2024, the installation has been continuously changing, featuring greetings from the bookshop, work by noted authors, and, when it is in open-mic-and-almost-anything-goes mode, ephemeral messages left by visitors in the gardens. View Concrete Poetry 2 Instagram feed

ARTIST STATEMENT
As public art, Concrete Poetry 2 is an expression of community trust. It is permanent and mutable. As often the case with public art, permanence and immutability can prove to be elusive. Through the installation, the artist queries: how do we move forward in an impermanent world?

Concrete Poetry is set in Clarendon, a slab serif with a bold, sturdy structure. It was created by Robert Besley for Fann—later Thorowgood and Co.—type founders (U.K.) in 1845 and exists today in modern iterations. Haas Clarendon was introduced as the U.S. National Park Service standard by Chermayeff and Geismar in 1975 and was in use on park signage until 2000.

EXHIBITION
The Ivy Bookshop gardens, Baltimore, MD, May 2024-present (permanent installation)

ON LOAN
Goucher College Rosenberg Gallery, Baltimore, MD, September 19-October 31, 2024, My Mother's Closet, Curator: Liz Faust

PRESS
BmoreArt’s Picks: May 28
-June 3, 2024
BmoreArt Instagram feed, June 24, 2024

  • Concrete Poetry 2: Cathy Park Hong, Minor Feelings: An Asian American Reckoning, May 2024
    Concrete Poetry 2: Cathy Park Hong, Minor Feelings: An Asian American Reckoning, May 2024

    Cast concrete letters, concrete pavers. Letters: 6” x 3”, variable letter width (100 letters and symbols, 600-700 lbs) Platform: 10’ x 8’ x 2”

Cylburn Park

Community–it’s no walk in the park.

Cylburn Park is a text movie in two acts inspired by and edited from a Baltimore neighborhood’s Google Group daily feed and the media’s coverage of it (below). The texts scroll by at a quick pace as if on a teleprompter screen and include lively exchanges over ducks and racial profiling, offering different perspectives from “bitchy” indeed to high-minded and deeply moving. Cylburn Park is relevant today in Baltimore and beyond as communities struggle to keep it together.

BEST SOMETIMES-RACIST GOOGLE GROUP
“For cringe-worthy entertainment, nothing beats reading the daily feed from the Mount Washington Google Group, the provenance for overly educated people with too much time on their hands and axes to grind. Aside from the mundane stuff–free kids’ toys and recommendations for dentists–the group’s archive of bitchy exchanges over whether to allow ducks to live in the community garden nearly brought some residents to blows. The Group’s Greek chorus really pulls out all the stops when teens from the Pimlico neighborhood are spotted in Mount Washington. Accusations of racial profiling are never funny, but you’ve gotta roll your eyes when Mount Washingtonians call each other ‘moron’ and ‘ass’ as they try to sidestep their own prejudices.”
City Paper’s “Best of Baltimore 2013”

SCREENINGS
2018 Maryland Institute College Of Art, Sondheim Prize Semi-Finalist Exhibition, Baltimore, MD
2015 Official Selection Brooklyn Film Festival, Brooklyn, NY

  • Cylburn Park
    Cylburn Park
    Still from film
  • Cylburn Park
    Film, running time: 00:10:44

The Daily Pad

“The internet poses significant problems in female representation, from pornography to the use of female form in advertising and notably the use of sexually violent language as a form of censorship and aggression towards female expression. Exquisite Corpse presents an array of female artists using both online and material forms for creativity, empowerment, and subversion, whilst reclaiming control of the representation of their bodies.”
Sarah Faraday, Curator, Exquisite Corpse, Fuse Art Space, Bradford, UK and Cologne, Germany

ARTIST STATEMENT
In 2015-16, I participated in Exquisite Corpse, an exhibition at Fuse Art Space in Bradford, UK and Cologne, Germany, featuring the work of hot (professionally hot, that is) fourth-wave feminist artists Rupi Kaur, Kate Durbin, Faith Holland, Poppy Jackson, Sue Williams, among others. The exhibition challenged the misrepresentation of the female form and identity on the internet. I screened Why, a film in which I utilized Google’s search engine’s autocomplete feature to find out what the masses wondered about me, an Asian woman, and discovered unsettling truths, fallacies, desires, and fears about many of us.

In conjunction with Exquisite Corpse, I took over Fuse Art Space’s Instagram account, posting from my series The Daily Pad–images created from Kotex products and blood–for six days, the duration of a period. The Daily Pad is a humorous, Dadaist challenge to those who view female sexuality, including menstruation, as a taboo to shame, censor, and silence. Sometimes the only rational response in the face of irrationality is to stop making sense. 
— Julia Kim Smith

EXHIBITION
Maryland Art Place, Baltimore, MD, 2020
Merkin Dream

Charles Krause/Reporting Fine Art Gallery at Busboys And Poets, Washington, DC, 2016
Artists United!, Curators: Alan Fern, former director, The National Portrait Gallery, Washington, DC; Mel Hardy, Millennium Arts Salon, Washington, DC; Michael Hodgson, MD, collector, Washington, DC; Charles Krause, Charles Krause/Reporting Fine Art Gallery, Washington, DC; Susan Orlins, author and editor, Street Sense, Washington, DC; Alexssa Todd, Christie’s, New York

A.I.R. Gallery, Brooklyn, NY, 2016
In The Secret Garden, Curator: Rocio Aranda-Alvarado, Curator, El Museo del Barrio, New York, NY

Gold + Beton, Cologne, Germany, 2016
Fuse Art Space, Bradford, UK, 2015
Exquisite Corpse, Curator: Sarah Faraday
Exhibiting Artists: Anastasia Vepreva​, Evelin Stermitz, Faith Holland, Julia Kim Smith, Kate Durbin, ​Lacie Garnes, Poppy Jackson, Rupi Kaur, Sarah Faraday​, Sheena Patel, Sue Williams
Fuse Art Space Instagram takeover: Julia Kim Smith - week of September 21, 2015

PUBLICATION
Beaver The Exhibition The Book, 2020
Forward by Kristen J. Sollée, Editor: Naomi Elena Ramirez

PRESS
Paper Magazine, Layne Weiss, “Exquisite Corpse: Inside Germany’s Powerful Feminist Exhibit,” February 2016
Dazed Digital, UK, Sooanne Berner, “After Cologne Sexual Attacks, Art Show Champions Women,” January 2016
artnet News, Sarah Hyde, “Cologne Art Show Celebrates Women In The Wake Of Attacks,” January 2016
this is tomorrow, UK, Alice Miller, “Exquisite Corpse,” September 2015
Corridor8, UK, Elspeth Mitchell, “Review: Exquisite Corpse, Fuse Art Space,” August 2015

 

  • The Daily Pad: Jesus Pad
    The Daily Pad: Jesus Pad
    Kotex pad, blood, 9 x 3.5”
  • The Daily Pad: A Period/A Bad Pun/A Damien Hirst Painting
    The Daily Pad: A Period/A Bad Pun/A Damien Hirst Painting
    Kotex pad, blood, 9 x 3.5"
  • The Daily Pad: Donald Trump’s Whatever*
    The Daily Pad: Donald Trump’s Whatever*
    Kotex tampon, blood, Size: 6 x 1”, *After a presidential debate, Donald Trump said Fox News Channel anchor Megyn Kelly had “blood coming out of her eyes, blood coming out of her wherever.” Trump’s campaign later claimed Trump said “whatever” instead of “wherever.” Whatever! The Washington Post, Philip Rucker, “Trump says Fox’s Megyn Kelly had ‘blood coming out of her wherever’,” August 8, 2015
  • The Daily Pad: Paul McCartney & Wings
    The Daily Pad: Paul McCartney & Wings
    Kotex pad, blood, 3.5 x 9”
  • The Daily Pad: PMS 186
    The Daily Pad: PMS 186
    Kotex pad, blood, 9 x 3.5
  • The Daily Pad: Super Blood Moon
    The Daily Pad: Super Blood Moon
    Kotex pad, blood, 9 x 3.5”

The Real Wi-Fi Of Baltimore (Are U Connected?)

Featuring the genre-busting talent of James Nasty and TT the Artist, The Real Wi-Fi Of Baltimore offers a punny and nuanced view of Baltimore neighborhoods in a short film edited from iPhone screenshots of Wi-Fi network names. The Real Wi-Fi Of Baltimore poses this challenge: Are we connected?

This project is supported in part by a Rubys Artist Project Grant. The Rubys Artist Project Grants were conceived and initiated with start-up funding from the Robert W. Deutsch Foundation and are a program of the Greater Baltimore Cultural Alliance.

PRODUCTION NOTE
“Baltimore is the world. The world is Baltimore.”
Your Face In Mine, Jess Row

In the wake of the Freddie Gray uprising, I was traveling around Baltimore, lost and looking for a Wi-Fi connection, and was fascinated by the Wi-Fi network names that came up on my phone. I started taking screenshots which I edited into a short film. Thanks to a Rubys Artist Grant, I was able to remaster the film for projection on the big screen and combine forces with James Nasty and TT the Artist to produce an original soundtrack for the film, “Are U Connected?”–both a question and a challenge.
— Julia Kim Smith, Director

SCREENINGS
2022 A.I.R. Gallery, A.I.R. Currents: Identity Politics, Brooklyn, NY
Curators: 
Christian Camacho-Light and Roxana Fabius

2017 Official Selection Slamdance Film Festival, Park City, UT
2017 Official Selection Cinequest Film Festival, San Jose, CA
2017 Official Selection Calgary Underground Film Festival, Calgary, Canada
2017 Maryland Institute College Of Art, Sondheim Prize Semi-Finalist Exhibition, Baltimore, MD
Vimeo Curated Collection: Comedy

PRESS
We Are Moving Stories, Carmela Baranowska, “Slamdance - The Real Wi-Fi Of Baltimore,” January 2017
Deadline Hollywood, Diana Lodderhose, Dominic Patten, “Slamdance 2017 Unveils Special Screenings,  Beyond & Shorts Program,” December 2016
Rubys Media And Performing Arts Grantees 2016, Greater Baltimore Cultural Alliance
kottke.org, Jason Kottke, “The Real Wi-Fi Of Baltimore,” November 2015 (The Real Wi-Fi Of Baltimore rough cut)
Good Morning Silicon Valley, Levi Sumagaysay, “Off Topic,” November 2015 (The Real Wi-Fi Of Baltimore rough cut)
Holy Kaw, Guy Kawasaki, “Mapping Baltimore By Wifi Names,” November 2015 (The Real Wi-Fi Of Baltimore rough cut)
Baltimore Fishbowl, Rachel Monroe, “Lifeline: Wu Tang LAN And Other Great Wifi Network Names In Baltimore,” November 2015 (The Real Wi-Fi Of Baltimore rough cut)
  • The Real Wi-Fi Of Baltimore (Are U Connected?)
    2022 A.I.R. Gallery, A.I.R. Currents: Identity Politics, Brooklyn, NY; 2017 Official Selection Slamdance Film Festival–Featuring the genre-busting talent of James Nasty and TT the Artist, The Real Wi-Fi Of Baltimore offers a punny and nuanced view of Baltimore neighborhoods in a short film edited from iPhone screenshots of Wi-Fi network names. The Real Wi-Fi Of Baltimore poses this challenge: Are we connected?
  • The Real Wi-Fi Of Baltimore: Charles Village
    The Real Wi-Fi Of Baltimore: Charles Village
    Still from film
  • The Real Wi-Fi Of Baltimore: Hampden
    The Real Wi-Fi Of Baltimore: Hampden
    Still from film
  • The Real Wi-Fi Of Baltimore: Sandtown-Winchester
    The Real Wi-Fi Of Baltimore: Sandtown-Winchester
    Still from film

Receipts

Receipts calls out and takes ownership of Asian and Asian-American slurs in a series of faux Asian-style scrolls featuring documented racist slurs received on sales receipts from Chick-fil-A, Hooters, and Papa John’s. 

EXHIBITION
Museum of Craft and Design, San Francisco, CA, 2021
Call & Response: Craft as a Tool for Activism
Curators: Glenn Adamson, Ebitenyefa Baralaye, Nate Watson

Korean Cultural Center, Beijing, China, 2017
Time Zone Converter, Curators: Joo Yeon Woo and Xi Zhang
Sponsored by the Korean government’s Ministry of Culture, Sports, and Tourism and the Embassy of the Republic of Korea

Korean Cultural Center, Joo Yeon Woo and Xi Zhang, Time Zone Converter catalog, December 2017

A.I.R. Gallery, Brooklyn, NY, 2017
Gathering Differences, A.I.R. National Exhibition, Curator: Helga Christoffersen, Assistant Curator, New Museum, New York, NY

  • Receipts
    Receipts
    Archival pigment print on rice paper, linen, wood dowel rods, wire, Site: A.I.R. Gallery, Brooklyn, NY, 2017, Gathering Differences, A.I.R. National Exhibition, Curator: Helga Christoffersen, Assistant Curator, New Museum, New York, NY (image courtesy Sebastian Bach)
  • Receipts: Ching Chong Chick-fil-A
    Receipts: Ching Chong Chick-fil-A
    Archival pigment print on rice paper, linen, wood dowel rods, wire, 36 x 24"
  • Receipts: Chinx Hooters
    Receipts: Chinx Hooters
    Archival pigment print on rice paper, linen, wood dowel rods, wire, 36 x 24"
  • Receipts: Lady Chinky Eyes Papa John’s
    Receipts: Lady Chinky Eyes Papa John’s
    Archival pigment print on rice paper, linen, wood dowel rods, wire, 36 x 24"
  • Receipts
    Receipts
    Site: Korean Cultural Center, Beijing, China, 2017, Time Code Converter, Curators: Joo Yeon Woo and Xi Zhang, Sponsored by the Korean government’s Ministry of Culture, Sports, and Tourism and the Embassy of the Republic of Korea (image courtesy Joo Yeon Woo)
  • Receipts
    Receipts
    Archival pigment print on rice paper, linen, wood dowel rods, wire, Site: Korean Cultural Center, Beijing, China, 2017, Time Code Converter, Curators: Joo Yeon Woo and Xi Zhang, Sponsored by the Korean government’s Ministry of Culture, Sports, and Tourism and the Embassy of the Republic of Korea (image courtesy Joo Yeon Woo)
  • Korean Cultural Center Time Zone Converter catalog excerpt
    “Have you heard of Chiura Obata, Yasuo Kuniyoshi, Yun Gee, Pan Yuliang, Zao Wouki, Ruth Asawa, or Theresa Hakkyung Cha? A few of them may sound familiar but most are perhaps unknown. Some of these artists were featured in The Third Mind: American Artists Contemplate Asia, 1860-1989, which was held at the Guggenheim Museum in 2009. In the catalogue for the exhibition, one can find the critical impact of Asian art and philosophy on American artists from 1860 to 1989. Many artists in the 2009 exhibition were precursors of the ten artists featured in the current exhibition entitled the Time Zone Converter.

Selfie Mirror

“The 5th edition of CURRENTS presents an exhibition in which artists respond to the theme of ABORTION. In this turbulent moment in history, abortion remains a signifier of people's ownership over their bodies, being as urgent a subject as any of the issues that now consume us.”
Barbara Zucker, Curator, Currents: Abortion, A.I.R. Gallery, Brooklyn, NY


ARTIST STATEMENT
Selfie Mirror is a participatory installation piece: A hand mirror is mounted on a microphone stand with the words “In Trump’s America, I am worth nothing.” etched on the front of the mirror and “I am secretly going to burn this thing down from the inside.” etched on the back. A piece of rope is tied to the mirror in a hangman’s noose and an enamel American flag pin is mounted to the mirror.
 
The work borrows from “Ways I Am Preparing For A Trump Presidency,” an essay by Blythe Roberson.* In Trump’s America, I am alarmed by the rise and normalization of hate crimes and violence. I am alarmed our democracy is teetering into fascism. I am concerned for our future. Diversity is America’s strength, and our diversity is threatened.
 
My hope is that when viewers get close to Selfie Mirror and look for themselves, they’ll see an image of themselves, and of others, in a different light.
— Julia Kim Smith

*Blythe Roberson, “Ways I Am Preparing For A Trump Presidency,” The New Yorker, November 15, 2016.

EXHIBITION
Maryland Art Place, Baltimore, MD, 2020
Merkin Dream

A.I.R. Gallery, Brooklyn, NY, 2018
Currents: Abortion, Curator: Barbara Zucker, Co-Founder, A.I.R. Gallery, Brooklyn, NY

Daily Trumpet, Curator: Jonathan Horowitz, March 9, 2018

SpaceCamp, Baltimore, MD, 2017
LabBodies Performance Art Review: Freedom, Curators: Dr. H. Corona and Dr. A. Pinkston

PRESS
Ms., Nicholl Paratore, “Visualizing Reproductive Justice Under Trump” (A.I.R. Gallery Currents: Abortion), February 2018
Artforum, “Artguide: Must-See New York” (A.I.R. Gallery Currents: Abortion), February 2018
BmoreArt, Angela Carroll, “Envisioning And Embodying Freedom,” November 2017
Baltimore Beat, Maura Callahan, “LabBodies’ Third Annual Performance Art Review Channels Pain Into Resistance,” November 2017

  • Selfie Mirror
    Selfie Mirror
    Etched hand mirror, rope, enamel American flag pin, Site: SpaceCamp, Baltimore, MD, 2017, LabBodies Performance Art Review: Freedom, Curators: Dr. H. Corona and Dr. A. Pinkston (image courtesy Ada Pinkston, Instagram)
  • Selfie Mirror
    Selfie Mirror
    Etched hand mirror, rope, enamel American flag pin, Site: A.I.R. Gallery, Brooklyn, NY, 2018, Currents: Abortion, Curator: Barbara Zucker, Co-Founder, A.I.R. Gallery, Brooklyn, NY (image courtesy Sebastian Bach)
  • Selfie Mirror
    Selfie Mirror
    Etched hand mirror, rope, enamel American flag pin, Site: A.I.R. Gallery, Brooklyn, NY, 2018, Currents: Abortion, Curator: Barbara Zucker, Co-Founder, A.I.R. Gallery, Brooklyn, NY (image courtesy Mona Eltahawy, Twitter)
  • Selfie Mirror (front, detail)
    Selfie Mirror (front, detail)
    Etched hand mirror, rope, enamel American flag pin, 9.5 x 7 x .5”
  • Selfie Mirror (back, detail)
    Selfie Mirror (back, detail)
    Etched hand mirror, rope, enamel American flag pin, 9.5 x 7 x .5”

Why

Julia Kim Smith utilizes Google’s search engine's autocomplete feature to find out what people are wondering about her, an Asian woman, and discovers unsettling abstractions, truths, fallacies, desires, and fears about all of us. Why is a compilation of 24 of the search engine results.

SELECTED SCREENINGS

2024 Goucher College Rosenberg Gallery, My Mother's Closet, Baltimore, MD

2018 Maryland Institute College Of Art, Sondheim Prize Semi-Finalist Exhibition, Baltimore, MD

2017 Feminist Art Conference, OCAD University, Toronto, Canada
2016 Gold + Beton, Exquisit Corpse, Cologne, Germany
2015 Fuse Art Space, Exquisite Corpse, Bradford, UK
Curator: Sarah Faraday
Exhibiting Artists: Anastasia Vepreva, Evelin Stermitz, Faith Holland, Julia Kim Smith, Kate Durbin, Lacie Garnes, Poppy Jackson, Rupi Kaur, Sarah Faraday, Sheena Patel, Sue Williams

2014-2015 Institute for Women and Art, Rutgers University, MTV: Momentum Technology Video and Momentum: Women/Art/Technology, New Brunswick, NJ

2014 Official Selection Center For Asian American Media CAAMFest, San Francisco, Berkeley, Oakland, CA
2013 DUMBO Arts Festival, Brooklyn, NY

2013 Washington Project for the Arts, Pepco Edison Place Gallery, Experimental Media 2013: Cyber In Securities, Washington, DC
Curator: Lisa Moren, Professor of Visual Art, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Exhibiting Artists: Birgit Bachler, Walter Langelaar, Owen Mundy, and Tim Schwartz; Channel TWo (CH2): Adam Trowbridge and Jessica Westbrook, with Jesus Duran; Heather Dewey-Hagborg; Hasan Elahi; The Force of Freedom with Dave Young; Taylor Hokanson; Ricarda McDonald and Donna Szoke; Lexie Mountain; Preemptive Media: Beatriz de Costa, Jamie Schulte and Brooke Singer; David Rokeby; Julia Kim Smith; WhiteFeather

2013 Baltimore Artscape, Slippage, Center for the Arts Gallery, Towson University, Towson, MD
Curator: Daniel Belasco, Curator, Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art, State University of New York

PUBLICATION
Beaver The Exhibition The Book, 2020
Forward by Kristen J. Sollée, Editor: Naomi Elena Ramirez

PRESS
Media-N: Journal of the New Media Caucus, Lisa Moren, “Algorithmic Pollution: Artists Working With Dataveillance And Societies Of Control,” October 2017
Feminist Art Conference, Valérie Frappier, “Meet The Artists FAC 2017: Julia Kim Smith,” December 2016
Paper Magazine,  Layne Weiss, “Exquisite Corpse: Inside Germany’s Powerful Feminist Exhibit,” February 2016
Dazed Digital, UK, Sooanne Berner, “After Cologne Sexual Attacks, Art Show Champions Women,” January 2016
artnet News, Sarah Hyde, “Cologne Art Show Celebrates Women In The Wake Of Attacks,” January 2016
this is tomorrow, UK, Alice Miller, “Exquisite Corpse,” September 2015
Corridor8, UK, Elspeth Mitchell, “Review: Exquisite Corpse, Fuse Art Space,” August 2015
The Washington Post, Mark Jenkins, “Fall Critics’ Picks: Gallery Exhibits,” September 2013
Washington Project for the Arts, Lisa Moren, “Experimental Media 2013: Cyber In Securities,” September 2013
Angry Asian Man, Phil Yu, “Julia Kim Smith Asks Google Why,” March 2013
 

  • Why
    Film, running time: 00:02:44
  • Why
    Why
    Still from film
  • Washington Project for the Arts Experimental Media 2013: Cyber In Securities
    “This knowledge engine was at play when the artist Julia Kim Smith took to Google in 2013 [2012] in order to produce the 1 min. video loop titled Why?. Before Kim Smith finished typing her question “why do asian women...?” the knowledge engine kicked-in, anticipating her possible thoughts: “like black men”, “age well”, “wear masks” and so on. These results are all the more disturbing because there is no human intervention in the algorithm at Google that generates these results, as there is when they censor pornographic and violent words. According to algorithms, a common denominator of people (a type of shared consciousness) are privately asking Google these questions about Asian women more than they are asking anything else. Google reads the action of both individuals and collective social and geographic groups in order to anticipate user’s intentions when they type.