This thesis aims to provide a context in which to situate my interdisciplinary art practice concerned with painting that addresses architecture. The paper explores my childhood memory of space and contemplation as themes that are essential in shaping my art practice as a whole, but also as my way of relating to art, nature, and the built environments such as parks and gardens. By reflecting on and conflating historical, cultural and philosophical contexts from a Western and Asian perspective, I will investigate how my work has been transformed through my personal journey from Korea to Canada, and how my practice can be situated at the intersection between art and architecture and the space between the real and surreal. Chapter one will exam...