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Blindspot Gallery Presents Polyglot, a Solo Exhibition by Wing Po So

Installation view of “Wing Po So: Polyglot”, 2025, Blindspot Gallery, Image courtesy of artist and Blindspot Gallery Blindspot Gallery is pleased to debut Wing Po So’s solo exhibition “Polyglot”, on view from 17 June to 23 August 2025, featuring her recent body of work. So’s intuitive approach towards art-making draws nourishment from her formative encounters with Chinese medicine, characterized by a meticulous observation of nature and its interconnectivity. She wields the materia medica derived from our living environment as vocabularies in her conceptual works, seeking to excavate the inner logic and systems latent in our surroundings. So shows a distinct sensitivity, curiosity, and fantasy towards nature and the cosmos, all through a pharmacological lens.

Installation view of “Wing Po So: Polyglot”, 2025, Blindspot Gallery, Image courtesy of artist and Blindspot Gallery “Polyglot” refers to an individual of multilingual proficiency, and here, So draws a parallel between materials and language. “Polyglot” encapsulates how materials embody the multiple “languages” of nature’s patterns. Akin to how languages carry their own logic, codes, and structures, materials embody their own rules and systems. So’s works accentuate the patterns, forces and interconnectivities hidden in our everyday.
By foregrounding “material as language”, “Polyglot” invites viewers to not only attune to what is being said but to how it is being said—through grain, fiber, residue, tension, and transformation. Just as language evolves over time and use, materials have the ability to metamorphose, combine, and regenerate, embodying how nature is an archive of living potentials.
The exhibition opens with its titular piece Polyglot: Mulberry (2023), which explores the cyclicality of life from growth to decay, and the myriad possibilities it can yield. The installation appears as an eco-system, with an assemblage of archaic Chinese medicinal jars containing different elements— ground powders, gnarly branches and roots, and crushed leaves. These substances are all derived from the mulberry tree, known in Chinese medicine for the curative remedies that can be extracted from its various parts.

Polyglot: Mulberry, 2023, Mulberry twigs, mulberry mistletoe, mulberry leaves, mulberry roots, mulberry root bark, dried mulberry, Sanghuangporus sanghuang, mulberry extract (anthocyanidin), fan, mp3 players, motors, wooden ball, glass containers, metal lids, speakers, Installation size variable, Image courtesy of artist and Blindspot Gallery Here, the tree is dissected and turned into a regenerative playground. The kinetic elements within each jar and the sound it creates evoke the workings of the Chinese medicine store, where the rhythmic interaction between tools and natural materials transforms things from one to another.
Magnolia Bud (2025) and Pattern Drawing (2025) embody So’s curiosity in the invisible forces and patterns that underpin our living environment: “what is unseen is not absent, but active, humming beneath the surface,” said the artist. Magnolia Bud appears as a small furry entity, and upon closer looking, it vibrates ever so slightly. It is made with the hairs of the magnolia tree bud, marking the first signs of Spring, signaling a vitality and reigniting of life. This uncanny being, oscillating between animal and vegetative forms, is slowly awakened, hinting at the energy that surges from within.
In Pattern Drawing, a dangling magnetic seed hovers incessantly above the hematite1, where magnetic beans are evenly scattered, propelled by a repulsive force that choreographs its motion, creating a pattern. The work shows the way that the forces of nature mould and move what we see, intangible yet palpable.

Magnolia Bud, 2025, Magnolia tree buds, 3D printed shell, motor, 8 x 14 x 9 cm, Image courtesy of artist and Blindspot Gallery So’s installations Hidden Terrains (2025) and Make Moves (2025) simulate the systems woven from disparate elements, underlining the interdependency within every ecology. In Hidden Terrains, So brings to the surface networks of water pipes which form closed systems, their structures mirroring that of rhizomatic ginger, growing beneath our feet through cracks and impeding roots. The pipes have translucent ginger skin covering their openings, illuminated from within and projecting the sound of water dripping. It signals life that thrives internally, demonstrating a resilience that defies hierarchy.
Make Moves is a video that draws on the logic of Conway’s Game of Life, where cells self-generate, reproduce, and die off depending on underpopulation and overpopulation, illustrating a symbiotic dynamic. In the video installation, images of asteroids configured into a grid flash before us on a mound of pumice powder on the floor. If one rock appears with two or three surrounding it, more appear in the next configuration, whereas if one appears with more than three, they vanish after, echoing the game’s rules. The asteroids are in fact volcanic lava rocks used in Chinese medicine, showing the interplay in So’s works between the miniscule and the cosmic.

Hidden Terrains 1 (close-up), 2025, Ginger skin, brass water pipes and fittings, LED lights, speaker, 184 x 133 x 49 cm, Image courtesy of artist and Blindspot Gallery So instils fantasy into her works, envisioning alternate universes out of the mundane: “mixing reality and fiction allows me to convey this unfamiliarity with and alienation from nature,” said So. In a group of installations made with used Chinese medicine cabinets salvaged from defunct pharmacies, she imagines parasitic microcosms that have emerged within, forming an interdependent ecology. In Sea Ear Hi-Hat (Take Turns) (2025), the breathing sound of abalone can be heard coming out of the cabinets, the shells opening and closing slowly. Perched on the back of drawers in The Navigation of Volcanic Stones (2025), pumices spin erratically, their movements steered by a compass seeking to help navigate their direction.
In The Bookmaking Habits of Select Species (in the Drawers) (2025), a constellation is formed by the spectral perforations left by tiny arthropods on the underside of drawers, serving as an inscription of life’s perseverance. They resemble an indecipherable alien code, an ode to Ken Liu’s 2012 sci-fi short story, The Bookmaking Habits of Select Species, imagining how extraterrestrial species preserve their writings. The abstracted form straddles between materiality and immateriality, illuminating the mystery of the invisible forces that shape our world. To observe it is to decipher it.
“Art-making to me is really like the idea of travelling, taking me to various places, meeting different people, connecting the dots of languages and knowledge to form constellations in the sky – to satisfy curiosity,” said the artist.

Sea Ear Hi-Hat (Take Turns) (close-up), 2025, Herbal medicine drawers, wood, abalone shells, brass rods, motors, 92 x 138 x 108 cm, Image courtesy of artist and Blindspot Gallery Venue
Blindspot Gallery, 15/F, Po Chai Industrial Building, 28 Wong Chuk Hang Road, Wong Chuk Hang, Hong KongArtist
Wing Po SoExhibition Dates
June 17 – August 23, 2025Gallery Hours
Tuesday – Saturday | 10:30 AM – 6:30 PM (Sunday and Monday, by appointment only); closed on public holidaysWebsite
https://blindspotgallery.comInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/blindspotgallery/Contact
info@blindspotgallery.comAbout Artist
Wing Po So (b. 1985, Hong Kong) creates installations, sculptures, and videos using Chinese medicinal ingredients as artistic materials, excavating the hidden interconnections, patterns, and systems within nature. Her practice is influenced by her formative encounters with traditional Chinese medicine, drawing on its emphasis on a sensitivity and observation towards the living environment, nature and the Universe. So applies the same theory of knowledge in her investigation of forms, materiality, metaphysics, relationality and cosmology. So’s solo exhibitions took place at Para Site (2025) and Tai Kwun Contemporary (2018). She will also take part in the upcoming Seoul Mediacity Biennale (2025). Her work was recently exhibited at Para Site (2024 & 2020), Hong Kong Museum of Art (2024), 13th Taipei Biennial (2023), 14th Shanghai Biennale (2023), X Museum Triennale (2023), Kathmandu Triennale (2022), and UCCA Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing (2020), among others.
About Gallery
Set up in 2010, Blindspot Gallery is a contemporary art gallery based in Hong Kong. The gallery features diverse contemporary art practices, by emerging and established artists mainly from Asia and beyond. The gallery is committed to connecting its represented artists with an international platform and fostering global dialogues in the art community through its exhibition program and institutional collaborations.
(Text and images courtesy of Blindspot Gallery)
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Nonaka-Hill Los Angeles Presents Paintings by Kaoru Ueda

Installation View, Courtesy of Nonaka-Hill Nonaka-Hill Los Angeles is delighted to present paintings by Kaoru Ueda, a leading exponent of Japanese photorealism. Often termed a “superrealist,” Ueda is renown for his depictions of household objects and food suspended in space and time. Painted with exacting detail and concision, his works estrange the familiar through rigorous observation.

Installation View, Courtesy of Nonaka-Hill Ueda’s process is ostensibly a straightforward one in which he uses the visual information in his 35mm negatives as the basis for his hand-painted images; yet the results are paradoxical in that they are realistically unrealistic. Mirroring the “observer effect” in quantum mechanics, in which the act of observation alters the state of the object, Ueda intuitively changes what he termed the “raw and chaotic” aspects of his photographs into a new visual state based on painterly techniques of illusion. His images are therefore the result of subjective observation whose style is a cold—one might even say, surgical—act of seeing. This lends his works the feeling of sensuality colliding with clinicality, where the eros of illusion and the sobriety of reality blur.
Partly for this reason, there is a pop art sensibility subtly embedded within Ueda’s paintings. This is partly due to the estrangement of familiar objects through the marriage of photography and painting; but it’s also due to Ueda’s nod to Jasper Johns’ use of letterforms. In his paintings of soap bubbles and bottles, he renders his name in tromp l’oeil as an embossed label. Also akin to pop, Ueda tends to dispense with receding space, focusing instead on the object’s physical phenomena. As we enter its micro worlds of reflections and color shifts, Ueda gives it an iconic and spiritual dimension devoid of irony. Ueda is an artist more endeared to the power of subjective observation than to the politics of commodification.

Knife and Jelly, 1986, Oil on canvas, 53.2 x 65.3 cm, ©Kaoru Ueda, Courtesy of Nonaka-Hill Aspects of Ueda’s work can be surely traced to his biography: born in Tokyo in 1928, he initially sought a degree in medicine when he came of age but switched to pursuing painting at Tokyo University of the Arts. He eventually had his first solo exhibition in Tokyo in 1958, at which time he had been working as a graphic designer to support himself. In 1956, he had won the grand prize in an international poster competition funded by MGM studios. His graphic design studio consequently grew to a sizable staff and his painting practice became waylaid for a decade. When he restarted his painting practice in earnest, his use of photography took hold, imbibing aspects of mass culture absent from his early work.
As a consequence, Ueda’s paintings have an element of seduction that underwrites most popular advertising. But what his paintings are seducing us into is not the consumption of the object, but the physical wonderment of it. Ueda takes great pleasure in contrasting the densities, surface textures, and colors of his objects, as in his paintings of cutlery and Jell-O, sponges, or jam. We also find this in his soap bubbles and bottles, whose surfaces are stages for light and shadow through which we find another reality. Case in point: in Soapbubble M, 1982, we see the artist with his camera in the reflection, alluding to the handmade process of building an illusion, such as in The Arnolfini Marriage, 1434, by Jan Van Eyck. In it, we see the artist’s reflection in a convex mirror (a soap bubble!) behind the marital pair. In this sense, Ueda nods to a tradition that long preoccupied artists before modernism, in which the painter highlighted his subjective experience as the ur-subject of the painting. Ueda’s paintings, therefore, are documents of how an object can be changed by the artist’s observation, reminding us of how our perceptions make and remake the world with every moment of contact.

Raw Egg J, 2018, Oil on canvas, 45.5 x 38 cm, ©Kaoru Ueda, Courtesy of Nonaka-Hill Venue
Nonaka-Hill Los Angeles, 720 N. Highland Avenue Los Angeles, CA 90038Artist
Kaoru UedaExhibition Dates
June 4 – August 16, 2025Gallery Hours
Tuesday – Saturday | 11 AM – 6 PMWebsite
https://www.nonaka-hill.comInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/nonakahillgallery/Contact
gallery@nonaka-hill.comAbout Artist
Kaoru Ueda was born in 1928 in Yoyogi, Tokyo. Selected solo and group exhibitions include Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum (2024); Takamatsu City Museum of Art (2023); Hokkaido Museum of Modern Art (2023); Ibaraki Museum of Modern Art (2021); Yokosuka Museum of Art | Saitama Prefectural Museum of Modern Art (2020); Okazaki Children’s Museum of Art (2020); Kanagawa Prefectural Museum of Modern Art, Hayama (2017); Mito City Museum (2014); Sagamihara Civic Gallery (2003); Nerima Art Museum (2001); Rias Ark Museum of Art | Miyagi Prefecture (2001); Sakamoto Zenzo Museum of Art / Kumamoto (1999); Toyota Municipal Museum of Art (1998); Egyptian International Print Triennial, Cairo (1997); Kyoto Municipal Museum of Art (1997); Gwangju Museum of Art (1995); Museum of Modern Art, Shiga (1994); Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum (1993); Shizuoka Prefectural Museum of Art (1990); Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art (1989); Kasama Nichido Museum of Art/Ibaraki (1988); Saitama Prefectural Museum of Modern Art (1985); The Museum of Modern Art, Saitama (1983); Korea Arts and Culture Promotion Institute Art Hall, Seoul (1981); Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum (1978); Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum/Kyoto Municipal Museum of Art (1976); Seibu Museum of Art (1975); Düsseldorf Art Museum (1974); Tokyo Metropolitan Art Museum (1974). Kaoru Ueda was a professor at Ibaraki University from 1985 to 1993.
About Gallery
Nonaka-Hill was founded in 2018 in Los Angeles by Rodney and Takayoshi Nonaka-Hill.
Recognizing that art exhibition spaces of any scale and economy will, over time, provide a community with a matrix of new and long-lasting memories, Nonaka-Hill has endeavored to keep “Japan” as a connective presence in each of its exhibitions to date. Working with emerging artists, established artists, and artist estates from Japan and its diaspora, alongside non-Japanese artists, the gallery team has enjoyed the erratic shifts in self-education, exhibition presentation, and public storytelling.
(Text and images courtesy of Nonaka-Hill)
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Artemin Gallery Presents Still Telling, a Solo Exhibition by Chen Yuchun

Poster credit: Artemin Gallery Artemin Gallery is pleased to present Still Telling, a solo exhibition by Chen YuChun, on view from August 2 to September 6, 2025. The exhibition invites viewers into the quiet yet deeply resonant world of an artist who prefers to remain hidden—one who reveals, with great subtlety, how she inhabits her memories of space and finds stillness in a noisy world.
We begin by acknowledging that Chen YuChun’s anonymity is defined by her dislocation from her time. She tells stories—many of them—not in a rambling way, but with an almost urgent desire to speak, again and again. Like many others, she longs to be understood, to be recognized. And yet, her reserved demeanor is at odds with the intensity of her images: they pulse with quiet energy. Through her paintings, she portrays places she has visited or revisited, guided by life experience and the traces of memory. These encounters grant her new perspectives and new emotional states. And then, the transformation in her work takes shape through softly rendered, ambiguous spaces—a voice that is neutral, gentle, quiet, yet insistent. Rather than depicting specific events or recognizable figures, her paintings move away from figuration altogether.

雨後 After the Rain, 2025, Oil on canvas, 53 x 45.5 cm Still Telling invites visitors to experience Chen YuChun as a flâneur in the Baudelairean sense, one whose perspective exists askew from the mainstream. Can you discern, in the paintings, her visits to several places in Taiwan such as Jiufen, Manzhou, Changhua, Jinshan, Hongshulin, Liuying, or a therapist’s office? This is not a simple drifting through city streets. If time, memory, language, and the hippocampus form a structure—or rather, an ever-shifting path—then the painter becomes a wanderer within it, observing. At a distance that hovers between cool detachment and quiet empathy, she watches for human traces: the gesture a hand leaves on the back of a chair, sunlight lingering on a rooftop, the echo of seaside wind on the body. She does not rush to explain. She restrains emotion, allowing viewing to become a slow, slow, slow, slow process of permeation.

月亮 The Moon, Oil on canvas, 72.5 x 60.5 cm Several strategies are employed to keep telling her “anonymous stories” by painting. One such strategy is the use of hands. In Gloves, for instance, the human face appears only as a reflection in a mirror; the person is painted indirectly, only the mirrored presence is shown. Most of the paintings contain human figures or at least parts of them. Only one work, The Shades of Night, omits the human form entirely—yet moonlight casts two full shadows onto the ground, revealing an absent presence. Hands recur throughout the exhibition: are they human hands? Gloves? Mannequin props? In these paintings, the hand becomes highly expressive, speaking on behalf of the artist who otherwise refrains from self-declaration.

說話的手 Talking Hands, 2024–2025. Oil on canvas, 60.5 x 50 cm Another strategy lies in Chen’s color palette. Just as she lets hands speak for her, here color becomes a silent narrator—not mere decoration, but a voice in its own right. She never uses flashy, high-saturation hues. Instead, her palette feels like an aftertaste left behind by time. While not strictly Morandi-esque, she shares with Morandi a logic of graying things down. By subduing brightness, she aligns color with her introspective and reserved visual language. These muted tones echo the yellowing of memory, not as a retreat, but as a conscious choice: a refusal of spectacle, a rejection of dramatic emotional engagement. The delicate gradations of her colors mirror the flâneur’s mode of observation—Chen YuChun’s palette is an extension of this act of looking, a deliberate aesthetic decision to walk along the edge.
For the flâneur, observation itself is the core activity and purpose of life. The flaneur is not as an outsider, but as a gentle, persistent presence. The goal is not to chase the center of stimulation but to examine the overlooked edges. To feel the undercurrents in silence. To recognize what once was, in places now fading.

手套 Gloves, Oil on canvas, 60.5 x 45 cm To reflect this ethos, we are randomly playing two types of sound in the exhibition space: the ticking of an 1800s grandfather clock’s mechanical gears, and a kind of distant “quasi”-music. These are not music in the usual sense, but forms of sound that suggest the depth of time and the expansiveness of space. Their repetitive simplicity aligns with Chen YuChun’s still telling—stories told quietly, anonymously, and without flourish.

什麼都是和什麼都不是 Everything and nothing, 2023-2025, Oil on canvas, 60.5 x 50 cm Venue
Artemin Gallery
111, Taiwan, Taipei City, Shilin District, Lane 251, Jihe Rd, No. 32, Floor 1Artist
YuChun ChenExhibition Dates
Aug 2 – Sep 6, 2025Contact
info@artemingallery.com(Text and images courtesy of Artemin Gallery)
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Mansion9 Presents Minhee Yang Solo Show: The Coast of the Moon
Poster credit: MANSION9 “Everyone longs for their own moon.”
Minhee Yang, who has previously conveyed deep yearning for loved ones through works like Red Moon (紅月) and Longing Moon (戀月), now turns her gaze toward a broader horizon. Her latest exhibition seeks not only to express personal emotion, but also to offer peace and comfort to all who walk this earth.
Her artistic journey, rooted in expressions of deep personal longing, now expands toward a shared emotional landscape. As she states in her artist note:
“My work is a process of visualizing the psychological relationship between nature and myself. I observe nature solely through the eyes of unconscious experiences intuitively felt in my life. For me, nature is not just a subject—it is a field in which the forms, colors, textures, and compositions become a mirror, where my intuition meets the phenomena of the natural world. This field is a space shaped by the encounter between nature and my inner world, and within it, a shared theme of empathy quietly emerges.”
From the earth we are born, and to the earth we return. Upon the surface of the land, Minhee Yang’s sense of self rises—solid, solitary, and resolute. Her island forms reflect a “will to live,” enduring through clotted pain and emotional weight. Memories long etched into her heart take shape through modeling paste and pigment, as she layers paint only to scrape it away—engraving traces of time into the surface of the canvas. The resulting terrain may appear red or ashen, yet it stands firm and unyielding, a mirror of the artist’s hardened interior. Through this intense matière, she performs a kind of ritual purification—distilling the raw matter of life and returning it to the primordial cycle of eternal recurrence.
The Coastal Color series featured in this exhibition builds upon the resilient vitality expressed in Minhee Yang’s earlier Red Moon works, while expanding into a richer symbolic realm through a broader spectrum of color. Her emotions become more distinctly articulated in hue, extending into a wider human dimension that includes both herself and others. Rather than dwelling on weariness or despair, these works celebrate the quiet preciousness of everyday life. By doing so, they are expected to resonate deeply with those who have endured hardship—offering a shared sense of empathy and a reaffirmation of the will to live..Red Moon, 2025, Modeling paste, acrylic on canvas, 390 x 130 cm Venue
1F, 723-29 Yeoksam-dong, Gangnam-gu, Seoul, South Korea
Artist
Minhee YangExhibition Dates
July 7th (Thu) – July 27th (Sun), 2025Gallery Hours
10:00 – 19:00Website
https://www.mansion9.co.kr/Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/mansion9_official/Contact
lyj9003@mansion9.co.krAbout Artist
Minhee Yang
Hailing from Jeju Island, the artist captures its landscapes on canvas with meticulous observation and delicate expression. Selected as an Outstanding Young Artist of Jeju, she weaves the image of the moon into the island’s scenery—projecting both herself and the collective human experience onto it. Through this symbolic moon, She evokes a quiet yet profound longing, revealing the deep-seated desires that shape and drive human life.
About the Gallery
MANSION9 is an art space dedicated to supporting emerging and mid-career artists through exhibitions and the Atelier Mansion Program (AMP), a specialized program aimed at nurturing young painters. Located in Seoul, the space fosters dialogue between artists and audiences while cultivating a dynamic platform for contemporary art practices.
(Text and images courtesy of MANSION9 )
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Cuturi Gallery Presents Sixty Summers Here

Poster credit: Cuturi Gallery Singapore, 2 July 2025— Cuturi Gallery is proud to present Sixty Summers Here, celebrating a generation of ten young Singaporean artists in their 20s and 30s, whose practices embody the vitality and resilience of contemporary art-making. Marking Singapore’s 60th year of independence, the exhibition brings together works across painting, drawing, sculpture, and installation, with a focus on process and nuanced observations of everyday life. Their practices, rooted in care and creative rigour, offer quiet but powerful propositions for how art can persist, connect, and continue to evolve. Collectively, they signal not just what is emerging, but what is already here—and here to stay.

Yom Bo Sung, Rest of the World, 2025, Polymer clay, wood, 31 x 22 x 28 cm This exhibition is anchored by a line of inquiry structured around five open-ended questions: Who is here, what is here, where is here, when is here, and why here? These are not posed as rhetorical or diagnostic prompts, but as entry points for reflection.
The exhibition features Singaporean artists Aisha Rosli, Anna Du Toit, Casey Tan, Faris Heizer, Joel Seow, Marla Bendini, Oneal Parbo, Shen Jiaqi, Vanessa Liem, and Yom Bo Sung. Each artist presents a distinct perspective on what it means to create within the art scene today. What connects them is a shared attentiveness to their environments and a willingness to navigate ambiguity between comfort and restlessness, visibility and marginality, structure and improvisation. In the context of this commemorative year, the exhibition invites reflection on how artistic practices are shaped by place, time, and change. Rather than prescribing conclusions, Sixty Summers Here encourages viewers to slow down and attend to what is already unfolding. The works reflect a scene still in formation: sensitive, deliberate, and grounded in the present. Sixty Summers Here will be on view at 61 Aliwal Street, Singapore 199937, from 12 July to 8 August 2025.

Shen Jiaqi, The City with No Seasons, 2025, Acrylic on linen, 110 x 155 cm 
Faris Heizer, Take Five, 2025, Acrylic on linen, 100 x 120 cm Opening Performance by Marla Bendini: Conteng at 6 pm on July 12th
In the exhibition performance, Marla Bendini offers an act of communion—through movement, guzheng, and voice. Drawing from her tree rubbing works, she explores presence memory, and kinship with the land and more-than-human bodies.
The guzheng’s resonant strings and her voice become extensions of touch, sounding out what cannot be spoken, listening to what lingers. Each gesture is a ritual of care, rooted in slowness and reciprocity. A return to places once lived in, feelings once held, kinships yet to be fully known. It says: we were here, we are still here, and our stories are alive—held by the trees, the soil, and each other.

Aisha Rosli, Sun in My Face / Did Not Ask for a Life This Difficult, 2025, Acrylic, oil, charcoal and fabric on canvas, 90 x 86 cm Venue
Singapore: 61 Aliwal Street, Singapore 199937Artist
Aisha Rosli, Anna Du Toit, Casey Tan, Faris Heizer, Joel Seow, Marla Bendini, Oneal Parbo, Shen Jiaqi, Vanessa Liem, Yom Bo SungExhibition Dates
July 12 – August 8, 2025Opening Reception
Saturday, 12th July 2025, 5 pm till lateContact
+65 6980 3069
singapore@cuturigallery.com
london@cuturigallery.comAbout the Artists
Aisha Rosli (b. 1997, Singapore)
Singaporean artist Aisha Rosli graduated from the Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts (NAFA) with a Diploma in Fine Art (Western Painting) in 2018. She has had successful solo shows at Cuturi Gallery and was featured in several group exhibitions including OH! Open House in Singapore, Galerie LJ in Paris, Unit London in the UK, At The Table Group Show hosted by Christie’s, Harpers Gallery in New York, and ART SG in Singapore.
Referencing 20th century painters, Francis Bacon and Egon Schiele, as well as contemporaries such as Marlene Dumas, Rosli works within the tradition of figurative painting, driven by a mode of interrogation affixed to our bodily presence. Exploring themes of solitude, concealment, proximity, and desire, she presents figures inhabiting constructed scenes and situations that pander towards the uncanny.Anna Du Toit (b. 2001, Singapore)
Singaporean artist Anna Du Toit is a 24-year-old multidisciplinary artist based in Singapore and a Fine Art graduate from The Ruskin School of Art, University of Oxford. Her work is inspired by her surroundings, focusing on unusual details and developing them into a new perspective. Her pieces range from detailed ballpoint drawings to larger sculptures that explore themes of home and identity, ultimately offering a surreal look at her personal connection to care.Casey Tan (b. 1994, Singapore)
Casey Tan is a Singaporean painter whose works focus on visual metaphor and narrative. Drawing inspiration from everyday life, Tan reinterprets these experiences while still keeping in check with reality. Sometimes bringing drama and fantasy to the ordinary. Casey Tan graduated with a Diploma in Fine Arts in 2016 from NAFA, where he was also a recipient of the Ngee Ann Kongsi Scholarship. Prior to NAFA, he studied Digital Animations at the Institute of Technical Education (2011-2012). In 2019, Casey Tan was awarded the UOB Most Promising Artist of the Year. Besides receiving commissions, his artworks are also part of private collections, and they were featured in several exhibitions at Cuturi Gallery, Paris Asia Now and ART SG.
In his recent practice, he tries to avoid operating by intuition; instead, he takes time to understand and explore different ways of interpreting a particular scenario. He strives to create works that hold narrative and experiments in different ways of using acrylic as a medium.Faris Heizer (b. 1998, Singapore)
Faris Heizer is an artist who lives and works in Singapore. Working within the tradition of figurative painting, his works are based on personal observations of contemporary society and its structural workings revolving around capitalism and gender. In particular, Heizer gives form to the behavioural and performative aspects of social relations that arise from such. His artistic inquiries often feature the working class in a range of imagined realities charged with intimacy, tension, and bewilderment.
Graduated from NAFA with a Diploma in Fine Arts in 2018, Faris Heizer held three solo shows at Cuturi Gallery and have since participated in several exhibitions including Tang Contemporary in Beijing, Galerie LJ in Paris, Christie’s, Harpers Gallery in New York, Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery in Schloss Görne, Asia Now in Paris, Kohn Gallery in Los Angeles and ART SG in Singapore.Joel Seow (b. 1997, Singapore)
Joel Seow is an artist and educator. A graduate of the Rhode Island School of Design, he approaches contemporary representational painting with tenderness and a reverence for the craft.
His works explore the tension between intimacy and urban isolation, and how one’s memory and state of mind interact with familiar spaces. Layered with personal symbolism and autobiographical experiences, the spaces, objects, and figures in his paintings shift between solidity and transience, directly engaging with the inevitable opacity inherent in creating deeply personal images. His works have been featured in exhibitions in both Singapore and the USA. Joel was also a 2022 grantee of the Elizabeth Greenshields Foundation and a finalist of the AXA Art Prize 2022 at the New York Academy of Art.Marla Bendini (b. 1986, Singapore)
Marla Bendini is a BFA Interactive Media graduate of the School of Art, Design & Media (ADM), Nanyang Technological University (2013), where she focused on interactive video installations, film and performance. She started painting and making installations during her junior college education (2004).
Marla Bendini is also a cross-disciplinary artist and trans woman working in painting, text, sound and performance to articulate the infinitely faceted transgender experience on her own terms. Her current painting practice uses the female gaze through a combination of writing, drawing, painting, collage, and printmaking to create layered ‘documentations’ of a unique woman’s experience.
To date, Marla Bendini has performed and exhibited in Singapore, Malaysia, Thailand, Macau, Sweden,Spain and the United States of America.Oneal Parbo (b. 1997, Singapore)
Oneal Parbo incorporates either automatic painting or drawing that progressively develops into biomorphic shapes. Thereupon, he adopts elements of composition such as repetition and symmetry. This interplay between the lack of conscious effort from automatism and control through composing or altering the object is how these forms emerge. The contours depicted are non-representational, yet evoke a feeling of seclusion, paired with an unearthly quality in the subject matter. Fundamentally, this approach of refraining himself in providing any form of narrative allows him to concentrate on the compositional aspects of his work.
Oneal Parbo spent his formative childhood growing up in Singapore. He graduated from the Nanyang Academy of Fine Arts in 2018 and has since taken part in several shows including solo presentations Slow Burn and Voyages at Cuturi Gallery in 2022 and 2021, respectively.Shen Jiaqi (b. 1989, Singapore)
Shen Jiaqi’s practice delves into the historical and visual tapestry of the city, documenting the varied lives and experiences within the urban landscape. Her works serve as a visual chronicle, layering the stoic presence of architecture and industrial machinery with the adaptive nature of urban vegetation, and the fleeting essence of human presence. Through a nuanced exploration of themes, Shen’s works navigate the complex terrain of individual identity amidst the perpetual flux of our environment.
Shen obtained her MFA from LASALLE College of the Arts (with Goldsmiths, London) in 2022. She previously studied painting at NAFA (2010) and Visual Art & Drama Education at NIE (2015). Her work has featured in public showcases including Our Heartlands by Plural Art Magazine, Past.Future.Present. by National Gallery Singapore, NAC’s Streets of Hope, and Towards Sojourn – a McLaren GT project with Louis Vuitton. Shen Jiaqi received a Highly Commended award in the 2021 UOB Painting of the Year, Emerging Artist category and the Winston Oh Travel Award in 2022. Shen held her third solo show with Cuturi Gallery in 2024. In 2025, she exhibited at S.E.A. Focus and ART SG.Vanessa Liem (b. 2002, Singapore)
Vanessa Liem graduated under the International Baccalaureate Career-related Programme (IBCP) in Visual Arts at School of the Arts, Singapore (SOTA) in 2020.
Liem delves into the themes of voyeurism and power dynamics inherent in the relationship between the viewer and painting. Through figuration, she explores performativity in the depiction of self, and the reclaiming of our agency through the choreography of her figures.
Vanessa Liem has participated and curated several SOTA art exhibitions. For her work, she won Gold for the 2019 UOB Painting of the Year, Emerging Category. In 2025, Vanessa Liem received her Bachelor’s Degree of Fine Arts in Painting at the University of the Arts, London.Yom Bo Sung (b. 1996, Singapore)
Born in Daejeon, South Korea, Singaporean artist Yom Bo Sung taps into his own transnational experiences to explore the idiosyncratic nature of social, political and cultural identities. Reappropriating cultural symbols and imageries for his miniature sculptures, large-scale installations and free-standing sculptures, his wryly humorous practice picks up on the subtleties underlying the wide range of religions, languages and customs in the world.Yom received his Bachelor of Fine Arts in Sculpture from the Slade School of Fine Art in London, UK in 2020. He was awarded the Harper’s BAZAAR Art Prize Singapore in 2016, for his work ‘Gunny Stack’. He was also the youngest artist to be selected for the two iterations of the 4482 [SASAPARI] exhibition in London (2018, 2019). Yom Bo Sung held his solo show, Our Foreign Home, at Cuturi Gallery recently, and he continues to exhibit both locally and internationally.
About the Gallery
Founded in 2019, Cuturi Gallery is a contemporary art gallery based in Singapore with a strong focus on emerging Singaporean talents, many of whom form the core of the gallery’s roster. While rooted in its local context, Cuturi Gallery also actively collaborates with emerging and established artists across borders, extending its vision beyond Southeast Asia and Asia-Pacific, fostering meaningful exchanges that bridge cultural perspectives between the East and the West. This ongoing dialogue is central to the gallery’s mission.
In 2020, the gallery launched an in-house residency programme, offering both local and international artists the opportunity to develop new work in Singapore, culminating in a solo presentation. In 2022, Cuturi Gallery began a programme of satellite exhibitions in London, with plans to establish a permanent international outpost by the end of 2025. Cuturi Gallery is located in a conserved heritage shophouse in Kampong Glam, one of Singapore’s most vibrant cultural precincts and home to a growing ecosystem of independent art spaces and museums.
Nestled in a beautiful conservation shophouse, Cuturi Gallery stands in Singapore’s vibrant arts and cultural precinct of Kampong Glam, home to a myriad of independent art spaces and museums.(Text and images courtesy of Cuturi Gallery)
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Hong Foundation Presents Ke-āu:Yu-Ting Tsai Solo Exhibition, Tracing Matrilineal Memory through Technology

Poster credit: Hong Foundation The exhibition of the Hong Foundation‘s 2025 Canopy Project, “Ke-āu:Yu-Ting Tsai Solo Exhibition,” opened at the end of last month. In Taiwanese Hokkien, “Ke-āu” is a traditional term used to refer to the “wife” or female figure “behind the household.” Drawing from this phrase, the artist delves into matrilineal affection and memory, using mechanical installations and performance video to re-enter and reimagine family narratives.
Through bodily role-play and 3D modeling, Tsai reconstructs a youthful image of his mother and the surrounding environment of her past. Within the exhibition space, a red brick wall gradually collapses under mechanical percussion—offering an active, imaginative response to the irreversible nature of memory and time.
The exhibition features two works, including “Seven Days,” a time-based kinetic installation that reflects Yu-Ting Tsai’s background in mechanical engineering. After months of iterative experimentation, Tsai meticulously programmed and calibrated a system in which six iron hammers repeatedly strike a red brick wall. Over time, the wall slowly fractures and collapses, echoing the gradual erosion of memory and structure.
The artist measures time in accordance with the ritual timeline following his grandmother’s passing. Through the slow fragmentation of the wall and the accumulating mechanical scars, Seven Days gives physical form to the invisible passage of time. It also seeks to reckon with, and perhaps symbolically dismantle, the deeper roots of familial conflict—conflict that, long before the funeral rites, had already taken form as a red brick wall dividing one home into two.

Maternal bond, Installation view, Photo credit: @dulub_studio “Maternal bond” is a work composed of video and photography, piecing together the image of the artist’s mother in her youth through the perspective and recollections of the grandmother. In the video, Tsai invites his mother to apply makeup on him, styling him to resemble her younger self as seen in old photographs. In a moment of gentle confusion, the grandmother mistakes the artist for her daughter—causing three decades to collapse into one, folding time back upon itself in the slow current of memory.
Departing from conventional photo-compositing techniques, Tsai instead reconstructs the original scenes from the old photographs through 3D modeling. By digitally preserving and reanimating these past environments, the work evokes a subtle dissonance between the real and the virtual. Maternal bond was also invited to be exhibited at the 2024 PROYECTOR Festival in Madrid.

Maternal bond, Installation view, Photo credit: @dulub_studio Yu-Ting Tsai is known for his interdisciplinary practice that weaves together installation, video, and photography to explore and reconstruct the entangled relationships between landscape, history, and memory. His recent solo exhibitions include “Seeking for Absent Forms in Forests” at Kuandu Museum of Fine Arts in late 2024, and Screaming, Laughing, Soaked Body, Loving Farewell at Changhua County Art Museum in May 2025. The latter featured the video work See You Next Time, which interlaces three narratives to examine border imaginaries across Taipei Island, Thailand, and the Golden Triangle. The piece probes the construction of self-identity, notions of home, and the condition of contemporary peripheral spaces. See You Next Time was also selected as a finalist for the 2025 Taoyuan International Art Award.
The Canopy Project is an annual open call exhibition program organized by the Hong Foundation, encouraging diverse and experimental artistic proposals. In the 2025 edition, selected artist Yu-Ting Tsai turns inward—following previous works set in vanishing mountain paths and urban peripheries—to reflect on the familial and the domestic. In Ke-āu: Yu-Ting Tsai Solo Exhibition, Tsai explores the generative possibilities of memory and time. The exhibition is currently on view and runs through August 2.

Maternal bond, Installation view, Photo credit: @dulub_studio Venue
Hong Foundation(12F., No. 9, Sec. 2, Roosevelt Rd., Taipei 10093, Taiwan)
Artist
Yu-Ting TsaiExhibition Dates
June 28 – August 2, 2025Gallery Hours
11:00-18:00(Closed on Sundays and public holidays. )Website
https://hongfoundation.org.tw/Instagram
https://www.instagram.com/hongfoundation_art/Contact
info@hongfoundation.org.twAbout Artist

Yu-Ting Tsai
Website: https://www.yu-ting-tsai.tw
Yu-Ting Tsai(b.1999, Taiwan) is an artist who lives and works in Taipei, currently pursuing a master’s degree in New Media Art at Taipei National University of the Arts. The vocabulary words used in the work consists of various fields of knowledge, such as nature, technology, and history to construct a multi-perspective viewing. The mediums include installations, videos, and photographs. The core of the work stems from life experiences, exploring and identifying self, spirits, places, and histories. The individual is viewed from a topological perspective, and the ideas are generated by navigating through different systems and coordinates to interweave a common location in points. Tsai has held solo exhibitions in “Kuandu Museum of Fine Arts“, “ALIEN Art Center”, ”Changhua County Art Museum”, and his works have been screened & exhibited in Taoyuan Art Center ”TMoFA 2025 Taoyuan International Art Award”, Taiwan Contemporary Culture Lab ( C-LAB ), South Korea ”CICA Museum”, Spain “Festival PROYECTOR 2024”, the United States ”Annual Vertical Vision International Film Festival (VVIFF)”, Thailand, France, etc.
(Text and images courtesy of Hong Foundation)
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Tang Contemporary Art Presents Everything Is Where It Wasn’t, A Solo Exhibition by Artist TRNZ

Poster credit: Tang Contemporary Art Tang Contemporary Art Bangkok is proud to present Everything Was Where It Wasn’t, a solo exhibition by Filipino artist TRNZ, curated by Michela Sena. In this new body of work, TRNZ deepens his investigation into the fragile architecture of everyday life, revealing a world in quiet disarray where logic loosens, time folds in on itself, and the familiar slips gently into the unfamiliar.
In Everything Was Where It Wasn’t, TRNZ unveils a series of new paintings that radiate a subtle, dreamlike sense of displacement. This is not a violent dislocation, but a delicate, suspended condition, one that mirrors the peculiar sensation of dreaming, where meaning drifts, memory fractures, and emotional coherence dissolves. Each canvas seems to hover just outside the frame of narrative time, inviting viewers into a dimension that is both deeply intimate and quietly disoriented, a space where objects repeat with slight variations, moments occur out of sequence, and nothing ever fully resolves.
At first glance, TRNZ’s visual language, drawn from Japanese animation and graphic storytelling, appears accessible, even playful. Often identified with the new wave of Filipino artists, TRNZ has developed a style rooted in clean lines and visual clarity. But beneath this approachable surface lies a far more elusive and poetic exploration. TRNZ uses the familiar vocabulary of popular visual culture not to simplify, but to complicate. Through this recognizable and stylized lens, he evokes highly nuanced states of being: solitude, displacement, introspection, and emotional ambiguity.

Arranged Alphabetically, Not by Affection | 150 x 200 cm | Acrylic on canvas | 2025 His characters often appear suspended in states of quiet hesitation, caught in the spaces between action and reflection. They do not speak; they do not act. They simply are, isolated yet universal, contained within their own atmospheres. In this way, TRNZ masterfully expresses a main condition of contemporary life: the shared isolation that paradoxically connects us all. We are alone and in that aloneness, profoundly together.
Through subtle distortion and deliberate misplacement, TRNZ destabilizes not only physical environments but also psychological landscapes. Repetition, here, is not used to create rhythm, but to suggest dysfunction, a looping of gestures and forms that once made sense, but no longer do. This is the fatigue of the procedural world, rendered in soft hues and silent composition. Domestic scenes are revisited with slight shifts, introducing an uncanny discomfort. These are not scenes of spectacle, but of suggestion. The rupture is not loud, but internal.

Low-Maintenance Vertical Garden | 120 x 100 cm | Acrylic on canvas | 2025 The emotional tone of the work is not explosive, but restrained; and it is in this very restraint that TRNZ achieves his most profound effects. His paintings do not ask for attention, but they hold it. They do not confess, but behave with a quiet persistence that draws the viewer inward. The stillness in his work is never passive; it is charged with suspension, with waiting, with a sense that something unspoken lies just beneath the surface.
TRNZ does not offer conclusions. Instead, he creates space, intimate, reflective, and deeply human. Through a poetic misordering of time, space, and emotion, he blurs the boundary between the structural and the sentimental. In the gaps between the two, something flickers: vulnerable, displaced, but unmistakably present.

Studio View of TRNZ With Everything Was Where It Wasn’t, TRNZ offers a vision of contemporary life that is both gentle and unflinching. It is a portrait of our emotional terrain, quiet, subtle, disjointed, rendered with remarkable clarity and sensitivity. He does not impose meaning, but allows it to emerge softly, like a memory. In doing so, TRNZ shows us a mirror of ourselves: not as fixed identities, but as fleeting presences, each navigating our own suspended interiors, always close, always apart.
This exhibition invites viewers into that shared inner landscape, a space without linear time, where forms repeat and meanings slide, where everything is just slightly out of place. A space where, paradoxically, everything is exactly where it wasn’t and yet where we recognize ourselves most clearly.
Venue
Tang Contemporary Art Bangkok
Room. 201 – 206
River City Bangkok
23 Soi Charoenkrung 24,
Talad noi, Sampantawong, Bangkok, 10100, ThailandArtist
TRNZExhibition Dates
19 July – 24 August 2025Opening Reception
Saturday, 19 July at 4:00 PMContact
Tel: +662 000 1541
Email: bkk@tangcontemporary.com
About the Artist
TRNZ
b. 1992, based in the PhilippinesTerence Eduarte, better known as TRNZ, is a Filipino visual artist, who holds a BFA in Advertising from the University of Santo Tomas, and began his career as an art director at TBWA/SMP. He was introduced to art through locally dubbed Japanese animation that aired daily on 90s television. From 2017, he began focusing more on visual artwork with a perspective shaped by his advertising experience, expanding his work to a multimedia approach, and turned to focus more on Fine Arts.
TRNZ is an artist with a penchant for mis-arrangement – the past, concepts, emotions, and the intangible. He recontextualizes tangible elements, placing them in unconventional settings where their absurdity defies conventional logic, yet somehow feels as though they belong. His work explores the instability hidden within the everyday. Through misarrangement, repetition, and subtle shifts, he reconstructs the familiar into scenes where logic falters and meaning bends.
Working with restrained color and stillness, TRNZ creates images that hold tension quietly, drawing viewers into spaces where memory, control, and contradiction blur. In his hands, dislocation is not rupture, but a quiet, inevitable realignment of how things are seen and held.
About Tang Contemporary Art
Since its founding in Bangkok in 1997, Tang Contemporary Art has opened 8 spaces in Beijing, Hong Kong, Bangkok, Seoul and Singapore to promote the development of experimental art in different regions. In the past 28 years, Tang Contemporary Art has organized groundbreaking exhibitions in its gallery spaces, and also cooperated with important art institutions in China and abroad to accomplish outstanding art projects. The gallery strives to initiate dialogue between artists, curators, collectors and institutions working both locally and internationally. A roster of groundbreaking exhibitions has earned Tang Contemporary Art internationally renowned recognition, establishing its status as a pioneer of the contemporary art scene in Asia.
As one of China’s most influential contemporary art platforms, Tang Contemporary Art maintains a high standard of exhibition programming. Tang Contemporary Art represents or collaborates with leading figures in international contemporary art, including Ai Weiwei, Huang Yongping, Shen Yuan, Zhu Jinshi, Chen Danqing, Liu Qinghe, Liu Xiaodong, Chen Shaoxiong, Wang Yuping, Shen Ling, Shen Liang, Wu Yi, Xia Xiaowan, He Duoling, Mao Xuhui, Wang Huangsheng, Yang Jiechang, Tan Ping, Wang Du,Yan Lei, Yue Minjun, Wang Jianwei, Yangjiang Group, Zheng Guogu, Lin Yilin, Sun Yuan&Peng Yu, Qin Ga, Wang Qingsong, Yin Zhaoyang, Feng Yan, Guo Wei, Chen Wenbo, Ling Jian, Qin Qi, Yang Yong, Peng Wei, He An, Zhao Zhao, Xu Qu, Chen Yujun, Chen Yufan, Xue Feng, Cai Lei, Li Qing, Wang Sishun, Xu Xiaoguo, Lí Wei, Liu Yujia, Wu Wei, Yang Bodu, You Yong, Li Erpeng, Jade Ching-yuk Ng, Michelangelo Pistoletto, Adel Abdessemed, Niki de Saint Phalle, AES+F , Michael Zelehosk, Jonas Burgert, Christian Lemmerz, Michael Kvium, Sakarin Krue-On, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Natee Utarit, Kitti Narod, Gongkan, Entang Wiharso, Heri Dono, Nam June Paik, Park Seungmo, Jae Yong Kim, Diren Lee, Dinh Q. Lê, Rodel Tapaya, Jigger Cruz, Ayka Go, Raffy Napay, H.H.Lim, Etsu Egami, etc.
(Text and images courtesy of Tang Contemporary Art)
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Gene Gallery Presents Fan-Darboda, a Solo Exhibition by Artist Zheng Yi

Poster credit: Gene Gallery PART I – Preview
In the meticulously constructed poetic field of materiality shaped by artist Zheng Yi, the interaction between the individual and the primordial world is further deconstructed into “imprecise” sensuous imitation and “precise” rational interpretation. The divergence, displacement, and paradox between “Really” (i.e., the objective state of things as they are) and “Ought to be” (i.e., the ideal state things ought to achieve under possible conditions) form the central thread of Zheng’s creative practice. It is precisely the uncertainty inherent in the relationship between fact and value that constitutes the core meaning of “Fan-Darboda”: through capturing subtle differences and ruptures, Zheng attempts to reconstruct a wondrous, absurd, and even fantastical spatiotemporal realm—Darboda—thus leading the viewer into a speculative labyrinth interwoven with sensibility and rationality, idealism and reality.
Within the “Fan-Darboda” series, painting and sculpture engage in dialogues and contestations, wherein the two-dimensional and three-dimensional merge in a form of near-synesthetic integration, anchored in the present moment. Although geometric forms—circles and squares in coexistence—constitute the foundational visual elements of his works, Zheng eschews rigid rules and formal symmetry, instead creating what resembles a deconstructed, enigmatic “container.” The juxtaposition of diverse materials—such as the mildness of wood, the cold hardness of aluminum, the transparency of acrylic, and the austere sheen of stainless steel—creates a tension between the mechanical texture of industrial substances and the flowing rhythms of organic forms. This contrast transcends the utilitarian function of ready-made materials as mere tools.
The absurd narrative framework resembles an unresolved logical drama—neither striving for mechanical simulation of reality nor indulging in the illusory fantasy of symbols. Instead, it employs material as a medium and embraces deviation and misalignment as methods to confront the ambiguities of reality head-on. In Zheng’s practice, the spirituality, temporality, and spatiality break free from the material constraints and rational paradigms, opening up new interpretive dimensions and gesturing toward the infinite possibilities of heterogenous space-time.
Written by Gene Gallery

Fan-Darboda, Exhibition view, Courtesy of Gene Gallery PART II – Press Article
In 1955, at the age of fourteen, Argentine pianist Martha Argerich traveled to Vienna and officially began her studies under Austrian pianist Friedrich Gulda. As neither of them was fluent in the other’s language, they often resorted to speaking a hybrid of German and Spanish. When faced with gaps in vocabulary, they would even invent new words to convey meaning. Gulda referred to this invented language as “Pan-Romance.”
Artist Zheng Yi draws inspiration from Gulda’s notion of “Pan-Romance,” and has accordingly “fabricated” his own unique linguistic system — “Fan-Darboda.” In Zheng’s view, encounters and communication between individuals and the world inevitably produce various forms of deviation and dislocation from the original state of being. It is precisely this “uncertainty” that captivates him. He keenly captures the subtle discrepancies and attempts to emulate the beauty, absurdity, and strangeness of these altered spatiotemporal experiences. Echoing Gulda’s naming, Zheng titled this solo exhibition “Fan-Darboda.”
“We flip through books made of glass, yet see something else.” Zheng is fond of the Swedish poet Tomas Tranströmer and sees a resonance between the poet’s vision and his own artistic methodology. Just as Tranströmer “sees” elsewhere, Zheng adopts imitation as his principal creative strategy—but his imitation targets not the “Really” (what is), but the ”Ought to be” (what should be). This imitation constitutes Zheng’s distinct approach to “seeing elsewhere.” He bypasses Plato’s denouncement of sensual imitation of the “eidos” (form), and instead, through his “Fan-Darboda,” offers a sophisticated interpretation of how “inaccurate” sensory imitation can be employed to “accurately” convey the deviations, dislocations, contingencies, and differences between ”Really” and “Ought to be.”
Although Zheng was originally trained in traditional Chinese painting, he did not confine himself to the classical paradigms of landscape, flora, fauna, or figure painting. Rather, he is interested in the philosophy of history behind classical techniques, focusing on the self-sufficient and harmonious rural lifestyle of the fisherman, woodcutter, farmer, and scholar. The “Fan-Darboda” series may be viewed as a contemporary installation of Chinese Shanshui (Mountains and Waters). In this solo exhibition, Zheng presents several works with poetic and enigmatic titles, such as Ayahuasca and The Land Being Talked About. Their geometric forms, though combining circular and square elements, are not strictly regular or symmetrical, but instead follow Zheng’s sculptural logic developed early in his practice, thereby transcending the utilitarian nature of the readymade and gesturing toward new ontological possibilities in an“othered”world.
Zheng’s earlier works primarily utilized materials such as wood, leather, wax, metal, bone, hair, matches, and light bulbs, which vary in hardness, softness, fluidity, flammability, or fragility. Although his early selection of materials often displayed a certain randomness and contingency, it was never merely bound to the materials’ physical properties. In recent works like The Skin and A Must-play Piece, Zheng continues his established sculptural logic while deliberately experimenting with new materials such as aluminum and stainless steel, to establish new paradigms and frameworks. They are not meant to represent a regression into the materiality of objects themselves, but rather to function as convenient methods through which Zheng can more effectively articulate his own “Fan-Darboda.”
Since 2009, Zheng has consistently employed wooden boxes in his practice, which constitute another defining feature of the “Fan-Darboda” series. For him, the wooden box resembles both a passage and a doorway to an alternate space. This recalls Jacques Derrida’s re-examination of “parerga (the supplementary or accessory that is not the core work itself)” and “passe-partout (a boundary line that marks the difference or separation yet also allows for a crossing over)” in The Truth in Painting. Through his rediscovery of “parerga” and its deconstructive relation to the center, Derrida uncovered the “infinite” or “useless” codes that lie behind abstract or de-surfacing paintings. Similarly, during Zheng’s creation, the wooden box, which is originally considered a decorative element in art history as non-subject, becomes a key that dismantles and escapes established epistemologies. Its framing function enables Zheng’s work to freely oscillate between two-dimensionality and three- dimensionality, between painting and material object, much like the Fugues and Variations across Distinct Voices in the music of Bach.
The Śūraṅgama Sūtra states: “Just as a man points at the moon with his hand to show it to others, those people, following the direction of his finger, ought to look at the moon itself.” In Buddhist philosophy, true enlightenment—being beyond words and appearances—is incommunicable, and must be approximated through metaphors like “pointing at the moon.” Similarly, Zheng’s invented language of “Fan-Darboda” represents his own form of incommunicable “uncertainty.” Though such uncertainty may not necessarily lead to Zen enlightenment, its richness in deviation, displacement, randomness, and difference still serve as a guidepost for viewers—leading them to experience a strange, beautiful absurdity, or perhaps even to create their own new dialects of “Fan-Darboda.”
Written by Luo Shiping

Fan-Darboda, Exhibition view, Courtesy of Gene Gallery Venue
Gene Gallery, NO.4221, Longwu Road, Minhang District, Shanghai, ChinaArtist
Zheng YiExhibition Dates
June 8 – July 20, 2025Gallery Hours
Tuesday – Sunday | 11 AM – 7 PMWebsite
https://gene-gallery.comInstagram
@gene_galleryContact
shanghai@gene-gallery.comAbout Writer
LUO SHIPING
Luo Shiping is an art writer, Ph.D. in Aesthetics jointly trained by Tongji University and the Universität Freiburg in Germany, and a board member of the Macau Smart City Arts Development Association. His research primarily focuses on philosophy of art and art criticism, philosophy of technology, modern German philosophy, and comparative studies of Eastern and Western thought. He has published numerous articles in core academic journals and art criticism magazines. In recent years, Luo has also been involved in curating various art exhibitions, providing academic support, and contributing critical essays. He has been invited to deliver lectures and participate in dialogues on art and philosophy at institutions such as the Chun Art Museum, Modern Art Museum Shanghai, MACA Art Center, Shanghai Bund Art Center, and Luxun Academy of Fine Arts.
ABOUT ARTIST
ZHENG YI
Instagram: yizheng535
Zheng Yi, born in 1980 in Tianjin, China, now lives and works in Beijing. He graduated from the
Chinese Painting Department of Tianjin Academy of Arts and Crafts in 2003.
Zheng Yi’s artistic practice centers around the unique structure of the “box,” with a focus on the spatial presence of his works and the ways in which they foster dialogue between the artwork and its audience, evoking emotional and intellectual resonance. The Box series primarily explores themes of personal and collective memory, gradually developing into a coherent and self-contained system. To Zheng, the “box” serves as an innovative medium that lies between the two-dimensional and the three- dimensional, between painting and object. This structure not only reflects his own psychological framework, but also subtly corresponds to the inner worlds of the viewers. It simultaneously embodies a gesture of resistance and a sense of openness.
Recent Solo Exhibitions: Fan-Darboda, Gene Gallery, Shanghai (2025); DarBoda, Tong Gellery + Projects, Beijing (2021); Steep Room, zapbeijing, Beijing, China (2018);
Recent Group Exhibitions: Lunar Maria, W.ONESPACE, Shenzhen (2024); ASPHALT, Gene Gallery, Shanghai (2024); “As Above, So Below”, W.ONESPACE, Shenzhen (2023); Building Dreams, By Art Matters, Hangzhou (2022); a one and a two, Artists’ Book Exhibition, Anaya Art Center, Qinhuangdao (2020); on paper 2, White Space, Beijing (2018); Young Art 100, Beijing (2016); John Moore Painting Prize Exhibition, Hierarchy Museum, Shanghai (2014).
(Text and images courtesy of Gene Gallery)
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Gene Gallery Presents Pause For Collapses, a Dual Solo Exhibition by Artist Catalina Milea and Li Jun

Poster credit: Gene Gallery A disquieting sense of instability descends the moment one encounters the works of Catalina Milea and Li Jun. Familiar scenes and everyday elements—under the artists’ orchestration unfold into a multitude of unsettling possibilities. Yet these possibilities do not linger. At first glance, they collapse into an initial impression, only to resurface gradually as the viewer’s imagination begins to drift and deepen.
The concept of “collapse,” borrowed from quantum physics, lies at the heart of this exhibition. In quantum theory, every moment before its occurrence exists in a superposition—a state of multiple coexisting possibilities—until an observation or external force causes it to collapse into a single, definitive outcome. The works of Milea and Li, while rooted in scenes from real life, evoke fleeting personal memories—moments one might feel they’ve lived. Yet upon close comparison, these inner recollections never truly coincide with the images before us. Their intent is never to replicate reality, but rather to create some that transcend, distort, or strip away the expected and the orderly—like the apophenia (Klaus Conrad, 1958) or the simulacra (Jean Baudrillard , 1981).These constructs become the very source of each work’s intrinsic instability and expansive potential; in other words, Milea’s and Li Jun’s motives make the work itself a suggestion of a “superposition state”.
This explains the strange undercurrent so effortlessly present within each frame. Every potential state within a superposition is formed by elements that, while drawn from the everyday, have been transcended, distorted, or dislodged from reason and order. The works resurrect fragments of reality that are often hidden or forgotten, concentrating them into a sudden detonation of the familiar. They shake our sense of normalcy, evoking what Freud termed the uncanny (das Unheimliche, 1919)—a feeling both intimate and estranged, both known and disquieting.
As these feelings unfold, the work’s quantum system collapses with the viewer’s first impression— simultaneously giving rise to another system, one that hinges on personal memory, association, and imagination. We hear how Milea, guided by a private holographic logic, communes with sacred forces of nature, losing herself in a beauty that is seen but never seized. We see how Li, through quiet elegance, unveils the latent violences enacted by structures of gender and culture—her unease transfigured into aesthetic poetics, a way of negotiating with the world. Yet when exposed under the viewer’s gaze, these gestures also appear to mock, with subtle defiance, the very systems of power they unveil.
Within this new wave, every particle collides, every possible state intersects, giving rise to new permutations. The quantum state becomes the most fitting metaphor: elusive, diffuse, unbound. The human allure of uncertainty—primal and unshakable—takes center stage. Even as it arrives cloaked in fear and ambiguity, we cannot help but long for its hidden face: infinite possibility, eternal chance, and undying hope.
And it is this collision of simultaneous thought—at once unstable and ecstatic—that propels us into the peak of the moment. Such exquisite unreality does not fade. We remain here, in the pause, until the next collapse.
Written by Huo Yanru

Pause For Collapses, Exhibition view, Courtesy of Gene Gallery Venue
Gene Gallery, NO.4221, Longwu Road, Minhang District, Shanghai, ChinaArtist
Catalina Milea, Li JunCurator
Huo YanruExhibition Dates
June 8 – July 20, 2025Gallery Hours
Tuesday – Sunday | 11 AM – 7 PMWebsite
https://gene-gallery.comInstagram
@gene_galleryContact
shanghai@gene-gallery.comAbout Artist
CATALINA MILEA
Instagram: catalina_milea
Catalina Milea (b. 04.08.2000 in Bistrita, Romania) now works and lives between Cluj-Napoca, Romania and Paris, France. In 2024 and 2022, Catalina respectively received the degree of Master and Bachelor from University of Arts and Design in Cluj-Napoca, Romania, Faculty of Fine Arts – Painting. In 2022, she received the scholarship at Accademia di Belle Artidi Venezia. Selected Solo Exhibitions: Pause for Collapses, Gene Gallery, Shanghai (2025); My Eyes see without Looking, Galerie Kokanas, Marseille (2023); A Gathering of the Invisible, IOMO Gallery, Bucharest (2023);
Selected Group Exhibitions: Primitive Logistics, Matca Gallery, Cluj-Napoca, Romania (2025);
Whatever is new about this show is not yet visible, Zina Gallery, Cluj-Napoca (2025); Show Off 6, Matca Gallery, Cluj-Napoca (2024); Le Cas erotique, Galerie Kokanas, Marseille (2024); ASPHALT, Gene Gallery, Shanghai (2024); Hacking the Future, Matca Gallery, Cluj-Napoca (2023); AFTERLIFE. A New Beginning, Boccanera Gallery, Trento (2022); “There is no concept, only my intuition”, Cosmic House Gallery, Cluj-Napoca (2022); Eggwhite, Cosmic House Gallery, Cluj-Napoca (2022); Travel Guide, IOMO Gallery in Bucharest (2021); Simple Things, ArtWise Gallery, Saròspatak (2021); Opening Event, Cosmic House Gallery, Cluj-Napoca (2021);
LI JUN
Instagram: juuunli_
Li Jun was born in 1994 in Changsha, China; she now lives and works in Vienna. Since 2022, she has been studying in Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, class of Prof. Daniel Richter. In 2016, Li Jun received Bachelor of Arts from China Academy of Art. In 2024, she received Grant from The Elizabeth Greenshields Foundation.
Selected Solo Exhibitions: Pause for Collapses, Gene Gallery, Shanghai (2025); Heterotopia/遊園驚夢, ZÉRUÌ, London (2025); The Case of a Strange Woman, Turn Gallery, New York (2024); Teeth and Script, Art Lab Center, Beijing (2022); Curiosity Cabinet, Turn Gallery, New York (2021);
Selected Group Exhibitions: Beings Out of Place, Petitree, Shenzhen (2025); In the Still of the Night, Exhibit Studio, Academy of Fine Arts Vienna, Vienna (2024); These Boots Are Made For Walkin, Room 57 gallery, New York (2024); Ziffer im PDF, Gallery Krinzinger Schottenfeld, Vienna (2024); Reverie Reset, Gallery the Tigerroom, Munich (2024); HUMDRUM, CCA Andratx, Andratx Mallorca, Spain (2023); DETOUR, Gallery Func, Shanghai (2023); Prelude to the Backflow, BONIAN Space, Beijing (2023); Among Flowers, Turn Gallery, New York (2022); Beautiful Home, Powerlong Museum, Shanghai (2021); Shanghai Youth Art Exhibition, Shanghai (2019); Animation Art Biennial, Shanghai Museum of Contemporary Art, Shanghai (2018); Shanghai Festival “Daytime Dreamers”, Shanghai Theatre Academy, Shanghai (2016); MEMECITY Multimedia Art Festival, Art Museum of China Academy of Art, Hangzhou (2015);
About Curator
HUO YANRU
Instagram: yanrurue
Huo Yanru, as curator, writer, and author, currently works and lives in Shanghai. Her personal
research and practice focus on the genealogy of contemporary art history, the interactive relationship between the materiality and spiritual orientation of materials under the influence of changes in power structures, and the transformation of human emotions.
(Text and images courtesy of Gene Gallery)
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ARARIO GALLERY SEOUL Presents World Worlds, a Solo Exhibition by UM Tai-Jung

Poster credit: Arario Gallery Seoul ARARIO GALLERY SEOUL presents a solo exhibition by UM Tai-Jung (b. 1938), titled World Worlds, from June 18 (Wed) to August 2 (Sat) 2025. Featuring 27 works, including rarely exhibited sculptures from the 1970s, as well as new sculptures, paintings, and drawings, the exhibition delves into UM’s artistic universe and philosophy. His sculptures go beyond the mere shaping of forms or materials, becoming an artistic method that reveals the world and truth, inviting profound contemplation on the essence of existence, beauty, and the meaning of “dwelling.” UM’s artistic practice explores existence as a living structure in which objects and people, time and space, continuously intersect within a space of unique order. Engaging deeply with the materiality of metals such as iron, copper, and aluminum, he infuses his works with a sense of temporality, spirituality, and existential depth. In his early career, he was drawn to the raw materiality of iron, producing intense iron sculptures, and has since explored the diverse properties and forms of various metals. In particular, he has focused on the sculptural potential of copper, bronze, and aluminum to express meditations on space and time. UM’s work evokes poetic and meditative spaces, transcending simple forms to open up entire worlds and form a contemplative realm where humans may dwell. His practice encompasses Eastern philosophy, traditional views of nature, and cosmology, achieving a profound harmony between material and spirit.

World Worlds, Exhibition view, Courtesy of Arario Gallery Seoul Exhibition Theme
UM Tai-Jung’s solo exhibition World Worlds is a philosophical practice that explores how the world and truth are revealed through sculpture. The exhibition’s title borrows from Martin Heidegger’s proposition, “The world worlds,” which understands the world not as a fixed entity, but as a living field that constantly emerges and is formed through the relationships between humans, objects, time, and place. UM densely embodies this concept within the sculptural form, pushing beyond mere visual shapes to activate sculpture as a revelation of being amid the tension between concealment and disclosure in the earth and the world. His sculptures deeply engage with the materiality of metal to construct an open space where existence arises and thought resides—a world unto itself. This exhibition demonstrates that sculpture can mark both the beginning of a world and the unveiling of truth, offering viewers a chance to experience the possibilities of thought and dwelling through sculptural presence. UM’s practice creates meditative spaces and expands into an artistic pursuit imbued with Eastern philosophy and ontological reflection.

World Worlds, Exhibition view, Courtesy of Arario Gallery Seoul Venue
ARARIO GALLERY SEOUL (85 Yulgok-ro, Jongno-gu, Seoul, Korea 03058) B1F, 1F, 3F
Artist
UM Tai-JungExhibition Dates
Jun 18 – Aug 2, 2025Gallery Hours
Tuesday – Saturday | 11 AM – 6 PMWebsite
https://www.arariogallery.comInstagram
https://www.instagram.com/arariogallery_official/Contact
info@arariogallery.comAbout Artist
UM Tai-Jung is a leading figure of the first generation of contemporary abstract sculptors in Korea, having pursued his artistic path in the field of sculpture for over 60 years since the early 1960s. After graduating from the Department of Sculpture at Seoul National University, he further deepened his theoretical and practical understanding of sculpture at Central Saint Martins, University of the Arts London, UK. From 1981 to 2004, he served as a professor in the Department of Sculpture at Seoul National University, where he established a distinctive body of work centered on metal sculpture. He has received numerous accolades, including the Prime Minister’s Award at the 16th National Art Exhibition (1967), the Grand Prize at the Korean Art Grand Exhibition (1971), the Kim Sejoong Sculpture Award (1989), and the Lee Mireuk Award (2012). UM has held major solo exhibitions at the Georg Kolbe Museum (Berlin, Germany, 2005), Sungkok Art Museum (Seoul, 2009), ARARIO GALLERY (Seoul and Cheonan, 2019), and ARARIO MUSEUM in SPACE (Seoul, 2022). He has also participated in numerous group exhibitions at major institutions in Korea such as the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Seoul Museum of Art, Gyeongnam Art Museum, Pohang Museum of Steel Art, and Soma Museum of Art. Internationally, he has exhibited at the São Paulo Biennale (Brazil, 1973 and 1975) and Frieze Sculpture London (UK, 2019). His works are installed in prominent public spaces including Seoul Olympic Park (Korea, 1988), Dubrova Sculpture Park (Croatia, 1990), Incheon International Airport (Korea, 2002), and the Prime Minister Public Hall in Berlin (Germany, 2002). UM Tai-Jung’s works are housed in major Korean collections including the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Seoul Museum of Art, Pohang Museum of Steel Art, Leeum Museum of Art, and ARARIO MUSEUM.
Artist Writings
World Worlds
“Such setting up is erecting in the sense of dedication and praise. Here ‘setting up’ no longer means a mere placing. To dedicate means to consecrate, in the sense that in setting up the work the holy is opened up as holy and the god is invoked into the openness of his presence.”
– Martin Heidegger, The Origin of the Work of Art
To create a sculpture is to establish a world. But what kind of world is it? The essence of a world lies not in a mere collection of things, whether countable or uncountable, familiar or unfamiliar, that simply exist before our eyes.
‘World Worlds’. Such a world is one in which we exist more fully, as if we were at home and completely at ease within it. The World is always non-objective, and it is something to which we inherently belong. A stone has no world. Plants and animals, like stones, do not possess a world. Rather, they belong to the silent encroachment of the surrounding environment to which they are bound. In contrast, human beings dwell within the open expanse of beings, and therefore possesses a world. That is to say, the “world worlds”. As the world worlds, it gathers into itself a holistic space from which the grace of the gods may be granted or withheld, a totality in which preservation takes place.
The very existence of a sculpture opens up an expansive space. In this context, to “open up” means to freely offer a clearing within the open realm, and in doing so, to establish that clearing within the sculpture’s overall character. Through the sculptural work, a world is established. Thus, through sculpture, the open space of a world is brought into presence.
Metal (aluminum) arrives at gleaming brilliance, color at radiance, sound at resonance, and word at speech. In the glimmering brilliance of aluminum’s supple materiality, in the brightness and shadow of color, in the echo of sound, and in the naming power of words—when all of these return to themselves and assert themselves—presence is revealed.
As the artwork returns there—into itself—filling itself, what emerges is what we call earth. The historical human grounds their dwelling upon the earth and within it, as a way of inhabiting the world. By establishing a world, sculpture thrusts the entire earth into the open clearing of that world, and therein firmly anchors the earth.
Sculpture lets earth be, as earth.
A sculptural work that builds a world and sets forth the earth becomes a site of strife. In this clash of opposing forces, the disclosure of beings as a whole – that is, the truth – is brought forth.
“One of the places in which truth happens is the work of art”
Essay
Um Tai-Jung’s Theory of Sculpture:
The Poetry of Liberated Matter That Forbids Delusional Escapism
Sim Sang Yong (Professor, Seoul National University; Ph.D. in Art History)
Art and Destiny
What must we see—in humanity, and in the world? First, we must recognize the ascent, the uphill path of life, as we pass over a ridge—what Albert Camus called a “hill.” The name of this hill is “destiny.” Why a hill, and why an uphill path? Because the “answer” to tragedy and misfortune still remains, and will likely remain forever, unresolved. In Camus’ words, life is a journey undertaken in the absence of metaphysics. “Destiny is nothing more than a blind, inhuman force to which we endlessly challenge ourselves with our bodies—without any metaphysical foundation.” At the core of this challenge lies art. All art is a statement and attitude toward the uphill path of “destiny” that the artist undergoes and approaches.
There are two conditions—or more precisely, two contradictions—that compel contemplation of destiny. One is a metaphysical contradiction that continuously strains between necessity and goodness, between the daily existence and the ultimate, yet cannot resolve itself. The other is a contradiction embedded in history, captured in the following assertion: “Even refrigerators, televisions, and rockets shot to the moon have not succeeded in making gods of human beings… Old conflicts may have vanished, but in their place, new ones have emerged—perhaps even more severe.”
Art is the “reckless challenge” that throws itself into these two contradictions—metaphysical and historical—appearing endlessly new in form, though in truth always rooted in long-standing tensions. At the same time, this reckless challenge becomes a collective intelligence of awareness and action rooted in the belief that without such efforts, it would be nearly impossible to shine even a faint light on “destiny.” Is it impossible? Perhaps—but that is not a bad thing. “The impossible is a gateway to the supernatural; it is the door we must knock on.” Thus, art is the fierce struggle not to let destiny belong to the night. It is the impossible endeavor to pierce the darkness with an opening through which light from above might enter. This makes art the reason one does not need to choose a luxurious or honorable life, nor desire wealth or high status. The moment we give up on this endeavor, all that remains is regression—a boundary marked by the signpost that reveals the spiritual realm of art. Upon this sculptural theory, we must examine UM Tai-Jung’s world.
This is the fate of sculptural art in our era. The doctrine of speed and efficiency in the digital super-world has rendered sculpture heretical. Trapped in fast scrolling and clicking, the sheer volume of transparent data crowds out contemplation itself. As a result, the relationship between human beings and the existence of things is severely distorted. That distortion then infiltrates the senses and cognition within existence. Human senses and self-awareness are inherently physical and therefore intimately connected with the material world. While information continues to multiply, the space necessary for serious reflection is vanishing. People accustomed to search engines do not meditate. Knowledge that passes through no filter of “destiny,” knowledge that fails to attain wisdom, becomes nothing more than arbitrary bundles of fragmented and superficial information—an overwhelming flood.
We live in an age where the very proposition that “art is a space for serious thought” is mocked. Sculptors are relentlessly urged to convert into virtualists, hounded by the swollen beast of the digital age. Resistance has now become the essential condition for “simply remain as a sculptor”. A small number of sculptors insist to remain as “materialists”. They become aesthetic Amish or Mennonites, continuing a solitary struggle as guardians of an art rooted simultaneously in matter and spirit, in physical labor and immaterial thought—under the name of a world built solely upon faith and reason.
Few sculptors have borne the lineage of sculpture as consistently as Um Tai-Jung. The ultimate aim of art is to become free. And the freedom of art is the freedom to consent. That consent may lie in following a given path, or in breaking away from it. Yet it takes greater courage to stay the course which would bring even greater freedom. This is why UM Tai-Jung’s abstract sculptures, while continually evolving and traversing boundaries, have become ever freer.
Sculpture-Poem
Abstract sculpture, like abstract painting, requires its own unique mode of perception. UM Tai-Jung’s abstract sculpture is no exception. At first glance, it is like viewing language in an unfamiliar form—like holding a newspaper upside down. What one sees are strange, fragmented shapes of printed letters. Only when the page is turned right-side up do the letters form words, and meaning begins to emerge.
Um Tai-Jung turned to abstract sculpture early—already in the 1950s. Behind this awakening stood Constantin Brâncuși. The two share a path in renouncing all sculptural rhetoric—eloquence, ornamentation, and any elements meant to catch the eye. Yet Um’s abstraction took a different course from Brâncuși’s. His path is accompanied always by poetic resonance and rhythm, born from an inherent narrative implication. As a result, his world never ends in the obsessive pursuit of physicality alone. He refused—wholeheartedly—the cold neutrality of formalism, and imbued even the plainest geometry with the warmth of the earthly realm. None of his abstractions lose their warmth, and none culminate in cynical gestures hurled at the universe. This was already evident in Scream (1967), for which he won the Prime Minister’s Prize at the National Art Exhibition. Art historian Kim Youngna once interpreted the work as bearing the marks of “calligraphic strokes.” The interplay of horizontal and vertical, strong and weak, was extended further in his 1970s copper sculptures—contrasting the polished surfaces with rough, corroded textures.
Um Tai-Jung circumvented the false Cartesian dualism of “mind and matter” by adding the role of a bridge—leading from materiality toward poetry. Can matter be handled so sensually? He reaches even into the breath of matter. Matter comes to possess warmth. From within matter and space, he draws forth a language that is immaterial and non-spatial —a “sculpture-poem”, the cultivation of fusion aesthetics. What kind of poem is this? A poem about the “secrets hidden in copper plates.” A poem forged within a metal that is “gentle and soft in nature,” residing between strength and weakness. And a poem saturated with T.S. Eliot’s insight into the “mysticism of the East—a path of transcendent faith”.
In the foreword to Um’s solo exhibition at Hyundai Gallery in 1997, art critic Lee Jongsoong read his sculptures as “utterances of a transcendent existence.” This is an apt reading. Here, transcendence resolves the Platonic conflict between things and ideas. The statement “matter is evil” is a Platonic notion—rooted in Gnosticism or Manichaean thought from the Hellenistic era—that should have long been abandoned. Um Tai-Jung’s sculptural theory rises as a righteous corrector of such misconceptions. Matter is not the source of evil, nor is it something denied or severed from the soul. Matter is not a repository of rejected emotions and sensations, nor is it a prison for the soul. The dualism of matter and idea is as mistaken as the dualism of body and soul.
According to Keith Ward (1938- ), British theologian and philosopher of language, the soul and body are not two separate substances but two languages used to speak of the human being. Just as the brain and mind describe the same event, so too do matter and the immaterial describe the same event in sculpture. This is the ontological and aesthetic root of Um Tai-Jung’s “sculpture-poem.” For art to be a journey in which it cultivates the strength to renounce delusion, matter is essential. Without matter, art easily slips into illusion. But it must be matter liberated from Descartes’ dualism of mind and body. This liberation of the most material form of matter is precisely what Um Tai-Jung’s sculpture has accomplished. It is the reason we must look closely.
(Text and images courtesy of Arario Gallery Seoul)



