The Kate Oh Gallery is incredibly excited to present The sun does not set Group Exhibition from July 2 to July 23 featuring the work of Kate Oh, Raymond Blum, Chloe Han, Margaret Groton, Kwan Jin Oh, Angels Grau, Nevil Dwek, and Heo Jeong Ho.

The sun does not set brings together a diverse group of works that explore themes of nature, identity, and transformation through a range of abstract and semi-abstract forms. From floating blossoms to atmospheric landscapes and introspective portraiture, the exhibition offers a thoughtful meditation on presence, memory, and motion.

Floral compositions rendered in vivid reds, yellows, blues, and whites drift across pale, spacious backgrounds. These stylized forms strike a balance between tradition and modernity—evoking the elegance of Korean folk motifs while embracing a graphic, contemporary rhythm. There is a sense of rhythm and quiet energy in these works, as if the petals themselves are caught in a soft current, hovering between stillness and movement.

Other pieces introduce cosmic and elemental imagery: glowing spheres, cascading lines, and vaporous gradients suggest cycles of time, phases of the moon, or the flow of unseen energies. These works offer not a literal narrative but a visual atmosphere: An open-ended space for reflection, connection, and inward pause.

Adding a more intimate layer to the exhibition are the vibrant, abstract self-portraits. These are not portraits in the traditional sense, but expressive meditations on the self—emotionally charged, richly colored, and dynamically composed.

In their fragmented forms and layered gestures, they evoke the complexities of identity, memory, and inner life. These portraits stand as quiet declarations of presence, filtered through the lens of color and intuition rather than fixed representation.

What gives The sun does not set its unique resonance is the inclusion of multiple artists, each contributing their own voice, yet speaking in harmony. The interplay of styles and perspectives allows the exhibition to expand beyond a singular narrative. Instead, it becomes a conversation between artists, between mediums, between cultural memory and contemporary experience. Viewers are encouraged to move through this space with openness, to observe how different approaches to line, form, and color can still echo a shared sensibility.

As a collective expression, the exhibition underscores the value of diversity in vision and approach. The works are distinct, but they coexist in a shared atmosphere, reminding us that while our perspectives may vary, we are all shaped by the same intangible forces: light, time, memory, breath.

The sun does not set invites viewers not only to look, but to feel: To experience the subtle shifts of emotion and perception that art can offer when it is both deeply personal and shared. It is an exhibition that lingers, like a breeze moving through a quiet room: gentle, expansive, and quietly transformative.