Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art WSU
Mimi Jung: An Unfinished Origin
March 31 – June 27, 2026
Mimi Jung: An Unfinished Origin brings together recent sculptural works from this Helena, Montana- based artist. The loom has long served as the foundation of her methodical and often labor-intensive process, where the slow creation of each piece allows for deliberate shaping and assessment over time. Using unexpected and unconventional materials like paper and foam as wefts, a variety of non-traditional strings as warps, as well as woven pieces cast in metal, the artist’s work rewards close inspection, asking us to slow down and engage reflectively.
Central to her concerns are the gaps between what we believe we know and what remains unknown, creating space for wonder, contemplation, and connection. Correspondingly, her woven forms are intentionally ambiguous and in a state of change. Their structures invite multiple interpretations appearing near completion, undergoing deconstruction, or suspended between concealment and exposure. Jung relates this fluidity to one’s own sense of evolving self. “The core component of my work has always been identity and self-preservation,” says the artist. “It’s about how our narratives constantly evolve to fit into a much larger cultural narrative in order to survive.”
WOVEN
Mimi Jung began working with fiber on a loom in 2011, after completing her formal academic studies and losing access to university facilities. In search of space to continue working, she enrolled in several independent workshops; one of them unexpectedly introduced the artist to weaving and the loom. What began as a technical introduction became the foundation of her artistic practice. In her earliest works, Jung focused on flat tapestries, exploring the fundamental language of weaving—color, texture, and the structural relationship between warp and weft. However, Jung began to push beyond conventional textile forms in short order. In the mid-2010s, she experimented with thicker cords, rope, and layered materials, creating surfaces that projected outward and introduced depth and shadow. Her work gradually shifted from flat wall hangings toward sculptural and dimensional objects that emphasized tension, structure, and negative space.
Works like So Tell Me, Their Unspoken, and The Niceties, all from 2023 and from her Fallen Fence series, examine forms that are in a state of flux, implying a sense of deterioration as well as change and becoming. Using dense bundles of cord and carefully manipulated warp structures, these large, architectural fiber works blur the boundary between textile and sculpture while still remaining fundamentally rooted in the loom. Our exhibition centerpiece, the 2026 vivid yellow Certain Uncertainty, has completely left the wall to fully inhabit the three-dimensional—ascending from the gallery floor to perhaps a metaphysical space above.
CAST
In 2020, Mimi Jung was invited to a residency program at the John Michael Kohler Arts Center providing her with the opportunity to create works of art utilizing the company’s industrial materials and equipment. Jung was exposed to a body of technical knowledge that enabled her to explore forms and concepts beyond the possibilities of her own fiber- based studio practice. In the years prior, Jung’s collaborations with various California foundries positioned her to experiment at Kohler with casting her handwoven weavings into new and surprising brass sculptures. Embracing spontaneity and physicality, these works contrasted with Jung’s more precise, and carefully planned works. The resulting sculptures invite reflection on material transformation from textile to metal—what is lost, what is gained, and how our perception of the works shifts while navigating these changes.
In the years since working with Kohler, Jung has expanded upon metal casting resulting in various additional bodies of work. While traditional casting typically destroys the sand mold after a single pour, Jung set out in Keep, Silk to conceptually preserve in fiber what was not meant to remain. Elsewhere, the artist has sawed the irregular brass remnants from previous castings into large-scale hanging curtains, transforming what was once a solid form into a shimmering filigree. Suspended and loosely articulated, these fragmented strands catch light and movement, taking on a transient, almost atmospheric quality, as the installations subtly sway and glint, emphasizing ephemerality over solidity.
Text by: Ryan Hardesty
Executive Director
Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art WSU
THEIR UNSPOKEN
Poly cord, paper and plywood
75 x 75.5 x 9 in
2023
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