Artist Profile
A Life in Art, Teaching, and Public Service
- Seoul, South Korea
- Born in Seoul
- Round Rock, Texas
- Austin metro area
- Fine Art & Education
- BFA and education studies
- Public Art
- Round Rock Library lightbox mural
- International Exhibitions
- United States, Korea, and Europe
Biography
From Seoul to Round Rock
Kristin Sue Kim was born in Seoul, South Korea. Her maiden name is Kim (Jeoung), Sook-Kyoung. She has a husband (Medical Doctor) and three sons and currently lives in Round Rock within the Austin metro area. Her art sign means Kristin Sue (Kim, Sook-Kyoung) carries the gospel as a Christian artist.
Her father, Il Sun Jeoung, was a muralist who gave her art lessons from an early age. At Hyosung Catholic University in Korea, she won first place and received a scholarship, majoring in fine art and receiving a BFA. She gave free art lessons to children at Daeseong Orphanage for four years.
Professional Path
Teaching, Murals, Exhibitions, and Community Work
As an international student, she entered San Diego State University in 1985. After studies in Los Angeles, she married and moved to Maryland, where her husband attended GWU Medical School. She transferred to Bowie State University to study Fine Arts, creating a landscape painting backdrop for a BSU festival musical and winning First Prize at the Gaithersburg Art Spring Festival.
Her husband's career as a United States Air Force officer took the family across the country and overseas: Florida, where she taught art to military families and painted a mural at Oak Hill Elementary School; North Carolina, where she studied education at NC Wesleyan College and painted the "Narnia" mural at Englewood Baptist Church; and Germany, where she served as an art instructor at the Skills Development Center at Spangdahlem Air Force Base, held a solo exhibition at the Eifel Community Center, and served as president of the Europe USAF Artist Association.
In Texas, she taught art to veterans at the Air Force Village and to soldiers and military families at the Arts and Crafts Center at Lackland Air Force Base. After her husband retired from the USAF following service in Iraq and Afghanistan, the family settled in Round Rock, Texas.
Her 10th solo exhibition was held at The Art Institute of Austin, and in 2020 she had a solo exhibition at Round Rock City Hall, invited by the Chamber. Her painting "Angel Flower Q-3B" was selected by Round Rock Arts and Culture for display as a lightbox mural in the lobby of the Round Rock Public Library for a full year (January 2023 – February 2024). She was featured in VOGUE Manhattan Summer Issue 2025 and had a digital presentation at Artifact Projects Gallery in New York.
She currently serves as an Art and Culture Ambassador in Round Rock, Texas, teaches at The Art Institute of Austin, and regularly donates paintings to nonprofit organizations and public facilities.
At first, Kristin Sue Kim's paintings focused on the pastel tone still life and it was then changed to colorful landscape. She also painted abstract art as featured in her painting "The 4th of July," "Heaven" and "Angel Puzzle Series." She has had her own show and group show exhibitions in the United States of America, South Korea and Europe. Kristin Sue Kim had a group art show with other artists in MD, VA, Washington D.C., CA, FL, NC, TX and South Korea, New York, Europe.
Artist Statement
Art, Faith, Healing
Kristin Sue Kim's paintings blend multiple art traditions on a single canvas — action modern art, abstract expressionism, hyper-realism, and pop art can coexist in one composition. Each painting layers geographic and cultural references specific to the place that inspired it: British telephone booths, Texas bluebonnets, Croatian villages, Louisiana hot sauce bottles.
Water drops appear throughout her work as symbols of isolated individuals in modern society — people scattered among the crowd like grains of sand on a beach, sometimes swept up in crowd mentality without recognizing their own identity. This symbolism was inspired by her youngest son Daniel, who was diagnosed with mild autism.
The angel puzzle is her signature motif: angel-shaped puzzle pieces representing healers who carry the love of Jesus to lonely and marginalized people. Through these symbols, lonely people escape dark tunnels and regain vitality in life.
Painting with Heart, Painting with Love, Painting with Healing, Healing with Love; With love, you can heal.
Life in Art
Milestones
In Her Own WordsFull Artist Chronology
My father, Il Sun Jeoung made murals abroad and gave me art lessons from an early age.
At Hyosung Catholic University in Korea, I won first place and received a scholarship, and I majored in fine art and received a BFA. I worked as a reporter for the Girl Scout International Department and newspaper illustration at the Korea, CORAL JUBILEE International Camp 1981. I participated in the National College Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, and Pocheon Camp in Korea in 1983. I wrote an article titled 'We are one' about camping in nature based on the spirit of Scout and received the first prize. And I gave free art lessons to the children at Daeseong Orphanage for four years, and the memories with the children are very special. Before coming to the United States, I received awards from the Korean Art Competition and Mokwoohoe and became a member of the Korean Art Association and held exhibitions at the 22 Century Gallery and Sejong Culture Hall.
As an international student, I entered the language school through conditional admission to San Diego State University in 1985 and received a certificate. I moved to LA and then studied at LACC and Cal State Los Angeles. And a group exhibition by the Association of Korean Artists in Southern California was held at the Korean Consulate in Los Angeles.
I got married to a husband I met at a Korean Church and I moved to Maryland with him. This is because my husband went to GWU Medical School after graduating from UCLA.
I transferred to Bowie State University and while I was studying Fine Arts, I made a landscape painting for the BSU festival as a backdrop for the musical The Wiz. In addition, I received First Prize at the Gaithersburg Art Spring festival.
After my husband graduated from GWU, he became an officer in the United States Air Force and was commissioned to Florida 1996. When I did the 'Music and Art Festival' held at the church inside the Air Force base, I taught art to many students from kindergarten level to high school students. I painted a mural in the Oak Hill Elementary School cafeteria with volunteers, which I finished after three months. An article appeared in the US military newspaper "Eglin Eagle". And I served as the program director of the newly built ICC Academy, a Korean school in the International Community church. Korean schools are divided into basic Korean language classes, beginner classes, intermediate classes, and advanced classes, and there are art classes, dance classes, music classes, and taekwondo classes. The spring semester event was held on Mother’s Day and the fall semester event was held on Christmas Day. And I became a Sunday school Bible teacher and drew the contents of the Bible with the children after the Bible instruction. Two years later my husband was posted to California. Then my family moved to Rocky Mount, North Carolina, and I transferred to nearby North Carolina Wesleyan College, where I studied education. And I painted "Narnia" in the style of a mural for a summer Bible school theme at Englewood Baptist Church and also served as an AWANA leader.
My husband received orders to a military base in Germany, where I created the mural "Garmisch 2" in the Spangdahlem Middle School building. I also served as an art instructor at the Skills Development Center in Spangdahlem AF, teaching oil, watercolor, acrylic, and drawing classes to secondary and adult students. I held a solo exhibition at the Eifel Community Center and served as president of the Europe USAF Artist Association, an amateur art club that organized outdoor sketching sessions on the US Air Force base. I earned my MCE from the American University of California, Graduate School, Washington Campus, an online Bible school. Additionally, my husband was called to serve as a medical missionary through the Korean church.
Three years later, my husband was ordered to a military base in Texas. My husband and I went to San Antonio with our 3 sons. I taught art to veterans at the Air force village and to soldiers and military families at the Arts and Crafts Center at Lackland Air Force base. And I am a member of the Wilford Hall Auxiliary, a doctor's wife's association. I made posters for "DIAMONDS and DENIM" and wanted to help wounded soldiers by donating some of my paintings to charity auctions.
I also held several group art exhibitions at the Henry Guerra Library. The Great Northwest Library and Round Rock Public Library held Korean Spring (Dano) Festival and Fall (Chuseok) festivals to demonstrate Korean song, traditional dance and Taekwondo, taste Korean food, and try on Korean costumes. I gave people their names in Korean, wrote them in black calligraphy on rice paper, and shared Korean history books and cultural videos I received from the Korean Cultural Center in Houston, making an effort to promote Korean culture to the outside world wherever I went.
My husband retired from the US Air Force after serving in Iraq and Afghanistan. As a military family, we've had a wealth of experiences moving from place to place. Adapting to life in unfamiliar environments took time, but I embraced the diverse cultures and found inspiration for my paintings in these wonderful memories. After considering our family's opinions, we settled in Round Rock, Texas, part of the Austin metro area. I have participated in group exhibitions at Austin Art Space, Big Medium, Round Rock Art Space, TSU, Georgetown Art Center, and many other venues. My 10th solo exhibition was held at The Art Institute of Austin's gallery, and in 2020, I had the honor of a solo exhibition at Round Rock City Hall, invited by the Chamber. Additionally, my piece "Angel Flower Q-3B" was selected by Round Rock Arts and Culture and displayed as a large light box mural in the lobby of the new Round Rock Public Library for a year, featured in VOGUE Manhattan Summer Issue 2025 and Digital Presentation Artifact Projects Gallery in New York. Currently, I serve as an Art and Culture Ambassador in Round Rock, Texas, and I regularly donate my paintings to nonprofit organizations and public facilities.