Kim Lim (1935 - 1997) was a Singaporean-British sculptor and printmaker whose visual language synthesized modernist abstraction with multicultural sensibility through an approach that was notably forward-thinking for her time. Her extensive travels across Europe, East Asia, and Southeast Asia, along with her layered identity as a Singapore-born and London-based artist, deeply nurtured her artistic practice. Lim’s work was in many ways ahead of its time, anticipating the plural, global perspectives that now define contemporary art.
Lim was born in Singapore in 1936 to Chinese parents and spent much of her childhood in Malaysia before returning to Singapore to complete her schooling. In 1954, she moved to London to study at Saint Martin’s School of Art. Two years later, she transferred to the Slade School of Fine Art, pursuing sculpture alongside printmaking under Anthony Gross and Stanley Jones. This parallel engagement with three-dimensional form and graphic surface became central to her practice. Working across metal, stone, and wood sculpture, as well as printmaking, Lim developed a visual language rooted in modular construction and a keen sensitivity to materials. While her work has often been associated with Minimalism, it remained distinct from its American expressions, incorporating visual and thematic influences drawn from the many cultures she encountered during her lifelong travels—ranging from Cycladic figures in Greece to Shang bronzes and Han dynasty sculpture in China. Her sculptural forms are decidedly less industrial than her Minimalist contemporaries, more attuned to touch, rhythm, and historical reference.
During her time at Slade, Lim met sculptor William Turnbull, with whom she shared a deep admiration for Constantin Brancusi. They married after her graduation in 1960 and established studios in West Hampstead, later settling in Camden, where they raised two sons while maintaining adjacent working spaces. Lim began exhibiting soon after graduating, making her public debut in the landmark exhibition 26 Young Sculptors at the Institute of Contemporary Arts, London, in 1961. Her first solo exhibition followed at Axiom Gallery in 1966, the same year her monumental steel sculpture Day was included in Sculpture in the Open Air at Battersea Park alongside Henry Moore and Anthony Caro. At thirty years of age, Lim was one of the youngest participants. In 1977, Lim became the only woman artist included in the inaugural Hayward Annual, a testament both to her standing within British sculpture and to the structural exclusions that shaped the art world of her time. Her work was shown in significant exhibitions, including at the Roundhouse in 1979, and entered major public collections such as Tate, National Gallery Singapore, and the Museum of Modern Art, Nagaoka.
Lim has been featured in solo exhibitions at Singapore National Gallery; Camden Arts Centre, London; Singapore Tyler Print Institute (STPI); The Hepworth Wakefield, UK; UCCA Dune, China, among others. Additionally, she’s been included in group exhibitions at I.C.A., London; Whitechapel Art Gallery, London; Nagaoka Museum, Japan; Tate Gallery, London; Singapore National Gallery; Barbican Art Gallery, London; 14th Gwangju Biennale, Korea; Taipei Biennial, Taiwan; Turner Contemporary, Margate, UK; and Kunstmuseum Appenzell, Switzerland. Lim’s work is collected by a number of prominent institutions, including Arts Council, UK; M+ Museum, Hong Kong; Nagaoka Museum of Modern Art, Japan; Singapore National Gallery, Singapore; and the Tate Collection, UK.
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Kim Lim: Water Rests, Stone Speaks
UCCA Dune 26 Oct 2025 - 6 Apr 2026From October 26, 2025, to April 6, 2026, UCCA Dune presents “Kim Lim: Water Rests, Stone Speaks,” the first institutional solo exhibition in mainland China by the late British-Singaporean artist...Learn More -
Kim Lim: The Space Between
National Gallery Singapore 27 Sep 2024 - 2 Feb 2025Kim Lim: The Space Between. A Retrospective marks the most comprehensive exhibition to date of Singapore-born British artist Kim Lim. Once overlooked, this exhibition acknowledges Lim’s profound impact by tracing...Learn More -
Kim Lim: Space, Rhythm & Light
The Hepworth Wakefield 25 Nov 2023 - 2 Jun 2024Kim Lim: Space, Rhythm & Light is the first major museum exhibition of Lim’s work since 1999, offering unparalleled insight into the British-Singaporean artist’s life and work. The exhibition displays...Learn More -
Small World featuring Kim Lim
Taipei Biennial 2023 18 Nov 2023 - 24 Mar 2024Organised by Taipei Fine Arts Museum (TFAM) and curated by curator Freya Chou, writer and editor Brian Kuan Wood, and curator Reem Shadid, The Taipei Biennial brings together over 50...Learn More -
Kim Lim: Carving and Printing
Tate Britain 7 Sep 2020 - 28 Nov 2021'Printmaking has always been as important an activity for me as making sculpture' – Kim Lim, 1995 Born in Singapore, Kim Lim moved to England in 1954 to study art...Learn More -
Kim Lim: Sculpture, Drawing, Prints
Roundhouse Gallery 8 May - 2 Jun 1979Lim’s 1970s work is marked by a deeper experimentation into concepts of “form, space, rhythm and light”. Her series Intervals , which refers to both sculptural and paper works, employs...Learn More
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Tina Kim Gallery Announces Co-Representation of the Estate of Kim Lim
Artsy May 20, 2026Tina Kim Gallery has announced U.S. representation of the estate of Kim Lim, the British Singaporean sculptor and printmaker. This June, the gallery will make...Learn More -
Now Representing: The Estate of Kim Lim
May 20, 2026Tina Kim Gallery is pleased to announce its U.S. representation of the Estate of Kim Lim, a Singaporean-British sculptor and printmaker whose work constitutes a...Learn More -
Kim Lim’s “The Space Between. A Retrospective”
e-flux October 30, 2024Kim Lim’s dark wood sculpture Pegasus (1962) is an earthbound, stiff-backed version of the mythical flying horse. Shaped like a totem, it has no discernible...Learn More -
Kim Lim's Unique Abstraction Shines at Hepworth Wakefield
Financial Times January 15, 2024Kim Lim’s painted-steel arch, “Day”, radiates an otherworldly glow in a Yorkshire garden, the flat, white arc narrowing to a sliver as the viewer circles...Learn More -
‘I can sense her presence in the works’: the bold designs and trailblazing life of sculptor Kim Lim
The Guardian November 23, 2023The 20th-century Singaporean-British sculptor Kim Lim once said that her practice was informed “not so much [by] volume, mass and weight, but with form, space,...Learn More -
Kim Lim in Her Own Context
Ocula November 11, 2020In 1954, Kim Lim left her native Singapore for Britain with the sole aim to become an artist. In London, she enrolled at St. Martin’s...Learn More -
More Than Two Decades After Her Death, the Great Singaporean-British Artist Kim Lim Is Finally Being Written Into Art History
Artnet September 21, 2020You may not have heard of the late Singaporean-British artist Kim Lim. But that is about to change. More than 20 years after her death,...Learn More
