-

Wei-Ling Gallery presents ‘Unbounded’ , A Solo Exhibition by Malaysian Artist Chen Wei Meng

Poster credit: Wei-Ling Gallery Wei-Ling Gallery is pleased to present ‘Unbounded’, a solo exhibition by Malaysian artist Chen Wei Meng.
For many years, Chen Wei Meng’s practice has been shaped by the land. His earlier exhibitions established him as a painter of considered precision, working across agrarian fields, cascading horizons and atmospheric distances rendered with calm and structural clarity. Those paintings positioned the landscape as a framework through which feelings could be held and returned to, one whose role extended far beyond pictorial concern alone.
‘Unbounded’ is Chen Wei Meng’s eighth solo exhibition and the most significant reorientation of his work to date. These new paintings are built through sustained mark-making and formal reconstruction, their development shaped equally by a rigorous studio process of continuous reworking and by Chen’s longstanding study of Song dynasty (960–1279) ink painting techniques, a tradition whose discipline of restraint and gestural economy has remained a constant point of reference across his decades-long career.

Flying Dragon in the Sky 1, 2025-2026, Acrylic on canvas, 140 cm x 200 cm, Image courtesy of Wei-Ling Gallery & Chen Wei Meng Chen attributes this shift to a deliberate openness. “In my creative process, I completely follow my present state of mind and am willing to accept change,” he reflects, a stance that has made movement and uncertainty central to how the work is formed.
Central to this phase is a concentrated engagement with line. Influenced by the compositional principles articulated in Wassily Kandinsky’s Point and Line to Plane (1926), Chen approaches line as the foundational element of painting, attending closely to its pressure, direction, curvature and pace as registers of inner state. A poorly resolved line, in his view, carries consequence, capable of destabilising an entire composition and causing it to lose both vitality and focus.
The ‘Flying Dragon in the Sky’ series is where this school of thought becomes most legible. Four large-scale paintings build their monumental central forms from interwoven lines alone, each accumulated through repeated passes of mark-making against a restrained grayscale register. The negative space presses back, and it is only through prolonged reconsideration that each composition finds the terms of its own equilibrium.

Movement 4, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 120 cm x 90 cm, Image courtesy of Wei-Ling Gallery & Chen Wei Meng Across the exhibition, hierarchies within the image soften as emphasis disperses and no single element claims precedence over another. What Chen has arrived at is a mode of painting that holds its own meaning lightly, one in which, as he puts it, “nothing is actually that important.”
It is precisely in this loosening, this willingness to let significance sit without insistence, that his latest work finds its particular strength.
Venue
Wei-Ling Gallery , No 8 Jalan Scott, Brickfields, 50470, Kuala Lumpur, MalaysiaArtists
Chen Wei MengExhibition Dates
3 – 30 April, 2026Website
https://www.weiling-gallery.comInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/weilinggallery/?hl=enContact
info@weiling-gallery.comAbout Wei-Ling Gallery
Wei-Ling Gallery was founded in 2002 by Lim Wei-Ling with the ambition to nurture the development of Malaysia’s contemporary art scene. The flagship Gallery is housed within a heritage shophouse that was ravaged by a fire in 2004. The unique interior is an installation unto itself, having been designed by renowned Malaysian architect, Professor Jimmy CS Lim.
The Gallery’s position has been achieved through ambitious, diversified and contextual curatorial projects and programming. Wei-Ling Gallery has repeatedly presented Malaysian Contemporary art to international audiences, simultaneously representing a selection of widely-acclaimed local and international artists. Our exhibitions are free and open to all as a space for public imagination and inquiry.
(Text and images courtesy of Wei-Ling Gallery)
-

Wei-Ling Gallery Presents Salt of the Land, a Solo Exhibition by Cheng Yen Pheng

Poster credit: Wei-Ling Gallery ‘Salt of the Land’, Cheng Yen Pheng’s fourth solo exhibition, takes its name from the phrase “salt of the earth”, which suggests humility and resilience. In Chinese culture, salt is one of the seven basic daily necessities, alongside firewood, rice, oil, soy sauce, vinegar, and tea. A grouping that dates back to the Song dynasty. The Guanzi, an early text on governance, illustrates the importance of salt, describing it as both vital sustenance and a means of maintaining social order that connects the household to the state.
The exhibition at Wei-Ling Gallery gently shifts away from her earlier series, ‘Frugal Living –it’s Mulberry Season’ (2022), which focused on daily rituals, her daughter’s drawings, hand-stitched embroidery, and the mulberry trees she grew at home. This time, she looks beyond her doorstep, exploring the natural forces and fragile ecosystems that shape the world outside.

Cheng Yen Pheng, Salt of the Land, 2020 – 2025, Self-made and natural color dyed mulberry papers, banana stem papers, threads, color pencils, ramie, gold leaf, Variable dimension In this series, salt functions as a subtle symbol of continuity. Cheng engages with the four classical elements: water, fire, earth, and air. Each stage reveals a deliberate, attentive approach, reflecting the artist’s ongoing relationship with her materials. Water becomes pulp for handmade paper. Fire and wormwood ash purify and stabilise materials. Earth, mixed with plant fibres, is shaped into bricks. Air aids in drying paper and lifting feathers.

Cheng Yen Pheng, Untitled, 2023 – 2025, Self-made and natural color dyed mulberry bark, Variable dimension Cheng produced these works in Batu Arang, Selangor, a former mining town that continues to exhibit evidence of its industrial history while confronting land repossession. In response to these conditions, the artist cultivates materials in her garden, thereby integrating acts of care into her artistic practice. The evolving environment and the community’s adaptation directly inform her creative process.

Cheng Yen Pheng, Feathers on the Floor, but we stand firm and tall, 2023 – 2025, Self-made and natural color dyed mulberry papers, banana stem papers, threads, color pencils, ramie, mud bricks, cardboard, bamboo stick, Variable dimension By sourcing materials from her immediate surroundings, the artist foregrounds traditional craft techniques and situates them within a contemporary context. The use of pulp, clay, ash, and fiber demonstrates the transmission of artisanal knowledge and the preservation of cultural memory. For her, continuity signifies renewal, a living link between the past and what is still to come.

Cheng Yen Pheng, One Ringgit chicken, 2023, Self-made and natural color dyed mulberry papers, banana stem papers, threads, color pencils, color ink pens, 55 x 104 cm Venue
No 8 Jalan Scott, Brickfields, 50470, Kuala Lumpur
Exhibition Dates
October 9 – November 8, 2025
Artist
Cheng Yen Pheng
Gallery Hours
Tuesday – Friday | 10 AM – 6 PM
Saturday | 10 AM – 5 PM
(Closed on Public Holidays)Website
https://www.weiling-gallery.com/Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/weilinggallery/?hl=enContact
info@weiling-gallery.comAbout Artist
Cheng Yen Pheng (b. 1982, Penang), now lives and works in Selangor. Having graduated from Dasein Academy of Art with a Diploma in Fine Arts in 2004, Cheng’s works are deeply personal and autobiographical, reflecting the struggles and decisions that have shaped her life. Her art examines the process of reconciling conflicting realities, overcoming loss, and navigating the unknown, while remaining steadfast in her beliefs. Despite life’s uncertainties, her determination to stay true to herself and her principles remains a constant throughout her journey. This commitment to authenticity is mirrored in the powerful and intimate nature of her art, which captures her emotional and personal experiences.
Recognised as one of Malaysia’s most daring contemporary voices, Cheng made a significant impact in 2014 when her provocative work ‘ABU’ was censored as a finalist in the National Art Gallery’s Bakat Muda competition—a moment that underscored her boldness and refusal to compromise her vision. She was awarded the 2019 UOB Painting of the Year (Malaysia) and received the 2020 CENDANA Visual Arts Inspire Funding, which supported her research into local arts, crafts, and communities in Terengganu. In 2023, she was selected for the prestigious UOB-Fukuoka Asian Art Museum’s Artists Residency Programme.
Her art serves as a visual narration of her life, with the act of making becoming a means of organising, materialising, and preserving experience. Through themes such as femininity, maternity, motherhood, death, and the shift from urban to rural life, Cheng reflects on her personal transformation; capturing both its joys and hardships. Her thoughtful use of materials and textures enhances this emotional landscape, with each medium chosen to express different facets of her identity and journey.
Cheng Yen Pheng’s exhibitions, such as ‘PRICKED!’ in 2012 and ‘It’s Been Four Years Since…’ in 2020, continue to explore themes of identity, gender, and societal expectations. In the ‘PRICKED!’ series, she used balloons as symbols of gender and sex to examine the fluidity of identity and the challenges of societal norms, especially from the perspective of a woman seeking empowerment. Her 2020 exhibition marked a transformative period, with her work addressing her personal struggles, the complexities of motherhood, and the search for self-discovery. In ‘Frugal Living – it’s Mulberry Season’ (2022), she explores resilience through the act of stitching, using mulberry paper as a symbol of fragility. This series reflects her journey from city life to the countryside, capturing personal growth and the challenges of transitioning into a more sustainable, nature-based lifestyle.About Gallery
Wei-Ling Gallery was founded in 2002 by Lim Wei-Ling with the ambition to nurture the development of Malaysia’s contemporary art scene. The flagship Gallery is housed within a heritage shophouse that was ravaged by a fire in 2004. The unique interior is an installation unto itself, having been designed by renowned Malaysian architect, Professor Jimmy CS Lim.The Gallery’s position has been achieved through ambitious, diversified and contextual curatorial projects and programming. Wei-Ling Gallery has repeatedly presented Malaysian Contemporary art to international audiences, simultaneously representing a selection of widely-acclaimed local and international artists. Our exhibitions are free and open to all as a space for public imagination and inquiry.
In its continuous efforts of cultivating the local contemporary art scene, Wei-Ling Gallery is also one of the most prolific publishers of art publications in the country, valuing the importance of archiving. The Gallery’s publishing activity encourages an appreciation for contemporary art with a backlist of monographs, artists’ books, and exhibition catalogues which highlights the often-overlooked characteristics of an artist’s practice.
The Gallery is also active on all relevant social media platforms, especially our podcasts which took root during the Covid-19 Pandemic Lockdown. Launched in 2022, WLG Incubator identifies the next generation of Malaysian artists, by bringing together the opportunity for them to be advised and guided by an established artist. WLG Incubator also aims to highlight and encourage project collaborations with emerging Malaysian artists, helping them develop a practice that is authentic, experimental and progressive. Our WLG Discussion Lab covers topics which are pertinent to current issues and the Gallery will soon usher in WLG Salon, a gathering of individuals from the art fraternity and academics for serious discourses.
(Text and images courtesy of Wei-Ling Gallery)


