Eunnuri Lee
A Korean American artist whose work explores memory, ancestry, and the body as living archive. In these mixed-media pieces, she integrates painted forms with preserved botanicals, pearls, and textiles, creating layered surfaces that feel both tender and ritualistic. Her practice often reflects on cycles of life and loss, intergenerational care, and the quiet resilience of beauty. These works, now featured on The Hemline, hold space for the body as both fragile and enduring; a vessel adorned, protected, and remembered.

A layered portrait of Korean American identity. Through collage and painted likeness, this work confronts stereotypes, beauty standards, and the tension of representation across media and culture.

A body as offering, adorned with dried flowers, pearls, and fabric. This piece reflects on memory carried in the skin and the cycles of loss and renewal.

Eyes as guardians of memory. Framed in petals and resin, they invite us to witness beauty, grief, and resilience all at once.