• Interview | New York-based Artist Jieun Cheon

    Interview | New York-based Artist Jieun Cheon

    Jieun Cheon (b. 1995) is a multidisciplinary artist based in New York, exploring perception, memory, and the limits of understanding. Through installations that combine sculpture, painting, and drawing, she investigates paradoxes—order and chaos, visibility and absence. Her ongoing project, Uncanished Workld, creates immersive environments reflecting the tension between structure and instability. Cheon holds BFA and MFA degrees in Sculpture from Seoul National University and an MFA in Fine Arts from the School of Visual Arts, New York. Her work has been exhibited internationally and developed through residencies including NARS and Kunstraum.

    Demagnified z-axis: The ghost’s glasses, 2022, Rainbow quartz, brass and mixed media, 6.3 x 6.3 x 7.3 in

    Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?

    My artistic journey began in early childhood. I was deeply drawn to visual expression from a young age and spent most of my time drawing and making things. In elementary school, I even created postcards to sell for charity and made dolls both for myself and as gifts for others. At that time, making things felt completely natural to me.

    Originally, I planned to study animation until middle school. However, after entering an art high school and immersing myself in fine art through creating my own work, I realized that my talent and passion were more aligned with fine art than animation. A major turning point came when I visited an exhibition from François Pinault’s collection and encountered works by leading contemporary artists. Seeing how artists could engage in a profound dialogue with materials and transform them into sublime forms had a powerful impact on me. That experience solidified my decision to pursue art seriously, which eventually led me to study sculpture at Seoul National University and later fine arts at the School of Visual Arts in New York.

    t-axis: the entrance/clock of the ghost’s room, 2022, Sap of the lacquer tree, fake glit, brass, MDF, OHP film, spray paint, clock movements, resin and mixed media, 114.2 x 35.4 x 23.6 in

    What is your creative process like? Do you follow a routine or work spontaneously?

    My creative process is structured, reflective, and driven by a continuous dialogue between intuition and reason. I don’t work purely spontaneously—in fact, one of my core rules is to never follow my very first intuitive impulse. Instead, I take time to examine where that instinct comes from, whether it’s rooted in a memory, an image, or a larger system of thought. From there, I research references and concepts that resonate with that initial spark, gradually filtering out what feels superficial and keeping only what feels essential. Because of this process, my work may appear highly controlled or calculated, but the intuitive elements that remain are the distilled core of my visual sensibility. In this way, intuition becomes more precise rather than disappearing.

    I also tend to develop several project ideas simultaneously. Rather than forcing one idea into difficult conditions, I usually select which project to realize based on the materials, space, and technical limitations available at the time. This approach allows me to avoid major disruptions and helps the production process flow more smoothly, though it can be frustrating to postpone projects that require very specific conditions. Still, I stay flexible, especially during installation. When unexpected restrictions arise, I adapt on site and find alternative solutions. Overall, my process is not impulsive, but responsive—guided by careful planning, research, and a willingness to adjust when reality demands it.

    Pulse from Months, 2025, Acrylic paint on wood panel, gold leafs, gold paint, 45 x 9 in (each)

    Can you describe a recent project or artwork that you are particularly proud of?

    Two recent projects that I am particularly proud of include Origami Hermit Craband and The Calendar of the Permutations of 1000 Arms, two works that explore different aspects of my artistic practice.

    Origami Hermit Crab investigates imagined physical landscapes and geological structures through modular map-like drawings and sculptures. Inspired by fractal theory and the myth of Aspidochelone, the works take the form of fractal snail shell structures, revealing how space is generated, expanded, and transformed. At the center of this series is The Anti-Fractal Map, a sequence of intricate pen drawings and watercolor paintings on silk. Each piece functions like a navigable map, where architectural elements such as Gothic arches, gravestones, and plant forms are arranged within geometric grids based on fractal principles. While these compositions initially appear orderly, inconsistencies and spatial distortions gradually emerge, reflecting the tension between rational structure and the chaos that lies beneath it. I am currently working on the third iteration of this series and expanding its sculptural components.

    Alongside this, The Calendar of the Permutations of 1000 Arms is an ongoing installation that takes the form of a fictional calendar and serves as an experiment in deconstructing religion. In this project, I reinterpret the Thousand-Armed Bodhisattva as a system of time. The installation consists of acrylic-painted panels, pen-drawn wooden panels, and sculptural elements made of brass and quartz. The acrylic paintings depict decaying flesh in layered shades of red, while the pen drawings reconstruct the mineral components of the deity’s arms, referencing the Buddhist concept of śarīra (sacred relics). Each stacked pair of panels symbolizes a single arm, and together they function like a calendar that records the continuous cycle of formation, life, and decay. My long-term goal is to complete 1,000 pen-drawn panels, and I am currently focused on advancing this extensive series.

    These two projects, one focused on spatial mapping and structure, the other on time, belief, and transformation, together reflect my ongoing interest in how order, chaos, perception, and systems of meaning are constructed and experienced through art.

    Two recent projects that I am particularly proud of include Origami Hermit Craband and The Calendar of the Permutations of 1000 Arms, two works that explore different aspects of my artistic practice.

    The Calendar of the Permutations of 1000 Arms, 2025, Acrylic and pen drawing on wood panels, brass, quartz and mixed media, 140 x 100 in

    What role do you believe art plays in social and cultural change?

    I think art plays a unique role in shaping social and cultural change by making the invisible visible. It can surface the structures, beliefs, and patterns that often go unquestioned in everyday life. In my work, I focus on myths, rituals, and systems of knowledge—showing how deeply human perception is shaped by both cultural and psychological frameworks.

    By revealing these frameworks, art encourages reflection and awareness. It doesn’t prescribe behavior, but it allows people to reconsider assumptions and explore alternative ways of understanding the world. For example, the obsessive dedication and labor behind traditional religious art or architecture—something I study and respond to—can make viewers aware of devotion, discipline, and values that have historically structured societies.

    In this sense, art becomes a subtle agent of change: it challenges norms not by preaching, but by creating experiences that expand perspective, provoke thought, and invite new ways of seeing ourselves and the world around us.

     Śarīra from Days No.1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 2025, Pen drawing on wood panel, gold leafs, gold paint, 45 x 9 in

    How do your personal experiences and identity influence your art?

    My personal experiences and identity are deeply tied to my art. Growing up navigating different cultural and philosophical frameworks, I became very aware of how belief systems and rituals shape the way we perceive and understand the world. That curiosity naturally flows into my work, where I explore myths, knowledge structures, and the ways humans construct meaning.

    One of the strongest influences on me has been directly experiencing religious art and architecture. Visiting cathedrals, temples, and sacred spaces, I was struck by the obsessive dedication and precision of the artisans who created them. Their work often borders on madness—repeating patterns, layering intricate details, and committing themselves fully, sometimes blindly, to their vision. I was captivated by this intensity, this almost fanatical devotion, and it made me reflect on the kind of commitment I wanted to bring to my own practice.

    In my own process, I try to channel that same relentless focus. Folding, drawing, layering, and repeating over long hours, I embrace the rigorous, ascetic discipline and the kind of obsession that pushes a work toward precision and depth. My personal conflicts, my curiosity, and my devotion to the making process all find a tangible form in the work, and I see that as the truest expression of my identity in my art.

    The Anti-Fractal Map I, 2023-2024, Pen drawing, Japanese watercolor, Chinese ink, gold leather paint on silk and mixed media, 57.5 x 57.5 x 6.5 in

    What do you hope people take away from your art when they experience it?

    When people experience my work, I hope they take away two main impressions. First, I want them to appreciate the beauty of dedicated labor. I am inspired by religious artisans who pursued their craft with obsessive devotion, sometimes bordering on madness. Their unwavering commitment enabled them to carry out meticulous and demanding work. I see this intensity not as a flaw, but as a raw creative force that drives transcendence through making—an attitude that, to me, embodies the true essence of visual art.

    Second, I hope viewers sense the complexity of inquiry embedded in my practice. My work explores how the mind interacts with the world—how belief systems, myths, and structures of knowledge shape perception. Rather than offering clear narratives, it invites wandering, decoding, and reassembling, reflecting the exploratory and unstable nature of cognition.

    Ultimately, I see my work as a shared encounter: the audience brings their own experiences, just as I bring mine. I hope people leave with curiosity, reflection, and a sense that art is a space where interpretations multiply and new meanings emerge.

    Text & photo courtesy of Jieun Cheon

    Website: https://www.uncanishedworkld.com/
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/0_uncanished_workld/


  • Interview | Hong Kong-based Artist Mariah Solikin

    Interview | Hong Kong-based Artist Mariah Solikin

    Indonesia born, Singapore raised, Mariah has lived in Hong Kong for 25 years. Covid lockdown has rekindled her passion in painting. She is a self taught artist who uses acrylic and water colour to express her different styles, thoughts and emotions. Her current subject interests include word art, geometric shapes, lines, abstractions, Chinese characters and everyday objects to convey her perspective on connections, culture, humour, family and love.

    Her styles are precision, pure colours, geometry, western and eastern influences which capture textures, emotions, patience, depth, effort and time. There is a poetry accompaniment for some of her paintings.

    Her works are culmination of her self-discovery journey and her experiences living in 3 different countries. There are elements of contradictions and paradox in her works reflecting her personal feelings and her way of embracing both the complexity and simplicity of life.

    Flow, 2023, Acrylic on canvas, 30 x 40 in

    Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?

    I am an Indonesian who was raised in Singapore and I have been living in Hong Kong for the past 28 years. My previous profession was in financial services.

    It all started during pandemic lockdown when my kids’ screen time skyrocketed. Tired of the nagging, I began to paint: bold, loud colors and words that screamed for attention. An honest display and a chance for them to discover that any non-screen activities could also offer some joy. While I have limited success, I am rewarded with so much more. A personal artistic journey.

    Surge, 2024, Acrylic on canvas, 76 x 102 cm

    How has your artistic style evolved over time?

    I mainly paint acrylic on canvas and some water colours on paper. For acrylic, there are two themes: geometric shapes, word art, Chinese characters. These works reflect my experience in financial services and the part of me which craves precision, clarity and predictability. The other is more fluid: lines, movements and abstraction.

    I describe my style akin to the double slit experiment in physics. In this experiment, light demonstrates wave particle duality. Why have one if you can have two? I also love colours. I think we humans are so fortunate to be able to perceive such a wide range of colour spectrum. As I gain more experience, I add complexity and different painting techniques to materialize the vision of the paintings I have in mind.

    Glide, 2024, Acrylic on canvas, 30 x 40 in

    What are the main themes or concepts you explore in your work?

    It’s essentially about life and existence. How perception of these changes when you view it from different angles. I was looking for answers in philosophy, physics and sacred texts. The paradox of eternal and fleeting; universal and individual, complexity and simplicity. Carpe Diem and Memento Mori exist simultaneously. How to reconcile and embrace these contradictions and irony, to live gracefully and truthfully. Some paintings have an accompanying poem. It’s strange, but words appear and flow at the same time as I paint.

    Heart, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 30 x 40 in

    How do your personal experiences and identity influence your art?

    As we explore life and existence, you can’t escape from pondering about self and identity. Like many others who have lived in multiple countries, personal experiences tend to be richer and questions of identity might arise. While my works are the culmination of my life experiences living these countries, I go further from a physics point of view. There’s a super string theory which presumes that if we zoom into the infinitesimal, all existence is just waves of energy strings. So there isn’t really a question of identity.

    Mahjong Series: Faat no. 1234, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 16 x 20 in (each painting)

    What do you hope people take away from your art when they experience it?

    My works are an invitation for people to dive deeper into themselves and the meaning of life. At the same time, to notice and treasure the lightness of everyday moments where true beauty lies. We all share universal experiences wrapped and delivered in different parcels.

    Can you describe a recent project or artwork that you are particularly proud of?

    ‘Vision’ is one of the most recent works which is the largest at 40 x 40 inches. I was initially intimidated by the canvas size, but we became good friends. I’ve learnt so much more working in a bigger size. The feelings and the energy multiplied. So does the satisfaction. The theme is also one of the central themes about life. The infinite and limited, the endless and momentary existence, the fragments of totality, all combined into one.

    Vision, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 40 x 40 in

    Text & photo courtesy of Mariah Solikin

    Website: www.mariahsolikin.com
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mariahsolikin/


  • Experimenter Presents The Forest, a Solo Exhibition by Sohrab Hura

    Experimenter Presents The Forest, a Solo Exhibition by Sohrab Hura

    Poster credit: Experimenter

    Sohrab Hura’s third solo in Kolkata, The Forest at Experimenter – Ballygunge Place, brings together new oil paintings, recent works on paper, and video. Drawn from the series of ongoing oil paintings, the title encompasses within itself the act of waiting, denoting the forest as a place with a multitude of possibilities—it can harbour secrets and provide refuge or even a sense of solace and comfort. Hura’ s exploration in image-making through drawing is underscored by his tendency to reflect upon the social and the political through everyday ordinariness underscored by love, joy, relationships, and the familial.

    Installation view of The Forest, Courtesy of Experimenter.

    The exhibition features memories from television-watching, memes from popular culture, social media algorithms, events in political history, intimate moments with loved ones. Breaking through the frenetic numbness of the image-saturated world, where they are often consumed rapidly and without any reflection, Hura’ s quest for slowness, tactility and softness materialises through his pastels, gouaches and oil paintings. On view will also be a new body of work titled Timelines, a collection of acrylic paintings on cardboard boxes, which present overlapping vignettes. Sifting through the entanglements of past events, scenes both real and imagined, pop culture and news references, the work also questions what constitutes majoritarian history. Timelines brings attention to how changing the timelines of stories can alter the stories themselves—much like the boxes that can be folded inside out to form new combinations. Taking a step back from the heaviness of photography, Hura explores the element of meandering which these mediums allow while also offering a reassuring affirmation that he exists in the real space through the physical act of making. Hura’s works resist linear narratives which draw from how he looks at the world—experiences interspersed with humour, grief, satire, violence and melancholy.

    Hura’s new film Disappeared will also have its debut in India in the exhibition, where a seemingly distorted single shot of a forest tent is transformed through sound, colour, and texture into a near-narrative mystery that reflects on the malleability of perspective.

    Sohrab Hura, The Bouganvillea tree and the summer sun, 2025, Oil on canvas, 42 x 54 in, Courtesy of the Artist and Experimenter.

    Venue
    Experimenter – Hindustan Road | 2/1, Hindusthan Road, Kolkata, 700 029

    Artist
    Sohrab Hura

    Exhibition Dates
    November 5, 2025 – January 3, 2026

    Gallery Hours
    Tuesday – Saturday | 10:30 – 18:30

    Website
    https://experimenter.in/

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/experimenterkol/

    Contact
    admin@experimenter.in

    About Artist

    Sohrab Hura is a photographer and filmmaker. He lives and works in New Delhi, India.

    Select solo and group exhibitions include Sohrab Hura: Mother,MoMA PS1, NewYork, (2024–25); Post Scriptum. A Museum Forgotten By Heart, MACRO, Rome (2024–25), Ghosts In My Sleep,Experimenter – Colaba, Mumbai (2024), Spill, HuisMarseille Museum of Photography, Amsterdam (2021) andThe Levee,CincinnatiArt Museum, Cincinnati (2019), among others. Hura’s work has been widely shown in international film festivals such as UNDERDOX Film Festival; VancouverInternational Film Festival; Image Forum, Tokyo; Arkipel Film Festival, Jakarta;Moscow International Experimental Film Festival; Oberhausen InternationalShort Film Festival; FotoFest International, Houston.

    About Gallery

    Experimenter was co-founded by Prateek & Priyanka Raja in 2009 in Kolkata, India. With a multidisciplinary approach, the gallery is an incubator for an ambitious and challenging contemporary practice. The program represents some of the most critical contemporary artists worldwide. The program, rooted in dialogue and dissent, is considered to be a ‘pace-setter’ for its region, and extends from exhibition-making to knowledge creation, through regular talks, performances, workshops and through its much acclaimed, annual curatorial intensive – Experimenter Curators’ Hub. A second, more ambitious space was added in 2018, marking a deeper inquisition into the gallery’s realm of interest. Its third space Experimenter Colaba, established in 2022, marks the commitment of its discursive programming to Mumbai, a city that in turn represents the diverse pluralities of the region.

    The gallery attempts to expand the scope of contemporary practice beyond the ambit of its expected role. In 2016, its artist-book publishing wing was launched followed by the Experimenter Learning Program in 2018 which enables learning in fields of contemporary and performing arts, curatorship, film, writing, language and social culture. In 2019, Experimenter Outpost, an iterative exhibitions program outside the physical gallery temporarily inhabiting disused, characterful spaces was formed. 2020 marked the beginning of Experimenter Labs, an inclusive, experimental and multi- dimensional online platform in addition to the onsite gallery programming.

    (Text and images courtesy of Experimenter)


  • Experimenter Presents The Line is Time, a Solo Exhibition by Radhika Khimji

    Experimenter Presents The Line is Time, a Solo Exhibition by Radhika Khimji

    Poster credit: Experimenter

    Experimenter presents The Line is Time, Radhika Khimji’s third solo with the gallery, that brings together a new and introspective body of painting and installation.

    Khimji draws from an array of mediums and a layered technique of mark-making to reimagine geographies and abstractions within the environment. She approaches time as a subjective experience, measured by our internal time-consciousness, to think of temporality and fleeting moments that recognise an intuitive emotion as opposed to a reactive action. Her works fundamentally challenge the perception of time and respond to interior circadian rhythms.

    Radhika Khimji, Strait to the gate, 2025, Oil and photo transfer on MDF panel with tulip sub frame, 18 7/8 x 23 5/8 x 3/8 in, Courtesy the Artist and Experimenter.

    Informed by the physicality and materiality of the making process, Khimji’s practice navigates a collaged way of working, referencing perpetual displacements of the transitory body moving across a fragmented space. Geometry and its deconstruction emerges in the surface of her images — where body and landscape remain closely embedded in a liminal space, materialising through an interplay of absence and presence. The lines where dots converge create a tactile portal through which time is mapped across a layered narrative of space and temporal registers.

    Khimji alludes to a coexistence of two simultaneous timelines, where memories and linear time can be disentangled from their logical sequence. Navigating and escaping identification, the works reveal a visceral journey of ‘making’, by compressing many tempos, speeds, and durations. The surface of the works record the juxtaposition of body and spatial relationships, by weaving in shifts and ruptures through interventions with images.

    Radhika Khimji, Intrusions happen like medusa at night, 2025, Oil and photo transfer on MDF panel with tulip sub frame, 72 x 48 x 2 in, Courtesy the Artist and Experimenter.

    Khimji’s works navigate what it means to see and be seen, where the metaphors of the personal and collective subvert boundaries of identification of forms, fluidity, displacement and abstraction.

    Venue
    Experimenter–Ballygunge Place | 45 Ballygunge Place, Kolkata 700 019

    Artist
    Radhika Khimji

    Exhibition Dates
    November 5, 2025 – January 3, 2026

    Gallery Hours
    Tuesday – Saturday | 10:30 – 18:30

    Website
    https://experimenter.in/

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/experimenterkol/

    Contact
    admin@experimenter.in

    About Artist

    Radhika Khimji (b. 1979) lives and works between Muscat, Oman and London, UnitedKingdom.

    Radhika Khimji studied at the Slade School of Fine Art, the Royal Academy of FineArts and holds an MA in Art History from University College London. She lives and works between Muscat, Oman and London, United Kingdom.

    Select solo and group exhibitions includeCutting Into Space, Experimenter – Colaba, Mumbai (2023); the Oman National Pavilion, 59th International Art Exhibition of LaBiennale di Venezia (2022);Adorning Shadows, Experimenter – Ballygunge Place,Kolkata (2021); The Drawing Biennial, Drawing Room, London (2021);Rupture,Experimenter – Hindustan Road, Kolkata (2020);Shift, Galerie Krinzinger, Vienna (2019);Searching for Stars Amongst the Crescents, Experimenter – Ballygunge Place,Kolkata (2019);On the Cusp, Stal Gallery, Muscat (2018);Becoming Landscape, Krinzinger Projekte, Vienna (2017); 6th Marrakech Biennale, Not New Now, Marrakech (2016), among others.

    About Gallery

    Experimenter was co-founded by Prateek & Priyanka Raja in 2009 in Kolkata, India. With a multidisciplinary approach, the gallery is an incubator for an ambitious and challenging contemporary practice. The program represents some of the most critical contemporary artists worldwide. The program, rooted in dialogue and dissent, is considered to be a ‘pace-setter’ for its region, and extends from exhibition-making to knowledge creation, through regular talks, performances, workshops and through its much acclaimed, annual curatorial intensive – Experimenter Curators’ Hub. A second, more ambitious space was added in 2018, marking a deeper inquisition into the gallery’s realm of interest. Its third space Experimenter Colaba, established in 2022, marks the commitment of its discursive programming to Mumbai, a city that in turn represents the diverse pluralities of the region.

    The gallery attempts to expand the scope of contemporary practice beyond the ambit of its expected role. In 2016, its artist-book publishing wing was launched followed by the Experimenter Learning Program in 2018 which enables learning in fields of contemporary and performing arts, curatorship, film, writing, language and social culture. In 2019, Experimenter Outpost, an iterative exhibitions program outside the physical gallery temporarily inhabiting disused, characterful spaces was formed. 2020 marked the beginning of Experimenter Labs, an inclusive, experimental and multi- dimensional online platform in addition to the onsite gallery programming.

    (Text and images courtesy of Experimenter)


  • Interview | Seoul-Based Artist Ayana Hanbich Lee

    Interview | Seoul-Based Artist Ayana Hanbich Lee

    Ayana Hanbich Lee is a contemporary abstract painter whose practice investigates the non-linear structure of time through the material behaviors of paper, wood, paint and other chemical. Having lived and created artworks between South Korea and the United States. Her work reached a wider public when several of her paintings were featured in a Netflix-broadcast Korean drama, Moon in the Day.

    Effacement, the core of Lee’s practice lies the understanding that time does not unfold as a straight line. This extraordinary method is paradoxical to the traditional purpose of painting. It reincarnates stratified layers, revealing twisted, intertwined temporal strata as time-bearing forms. It redefines temporality through the sequential removal of layered paper and pigment, incorporating etching and chemical processes. Recognized for its “dimensional collision”, the structural juxtaposition of past and present.

    Shine-dow, 2023, Acrylic on canvas, 53 x 73 cm

    Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?

    I was born in Seoul, and moved to the States in 2008, and moved back and forth between the two countries due to education. I can say I was continuously exposed to seeing everything as new, old things as new again; things I already knew as things I needed to sense again. This repetitive re-encounter shaped my early sensitivity toward perception: the way the outside world enters the inner-self, and how that inner realm responds.

    Fine Arts in general was my desire from an early age. I was recognized in school-wide, statewide, and later international competitions, and eventually admitted to The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art, my long-desired institution. Although I can say I’ve lived in the realm of Art, the genuine journey began not through awards or education, the genuine artist journey started when I stated myself as it. which is not too long ago.

    Ren Ron, 2023, Acrylic on canvas, 73 x 100 cm

    What are the main themes or concepts you explore in your work?

    My early work centered on the interior self in emotions, memory, and the fragile contour of presence. Over time this expanded outward into the surroundings of my days, and eventually into “presency,” the encapsulation of moments. Ephemerality became not a subject but a medium of intimacy.

    Shifts between two cultures, languages, and my inborn characteristics highlighted my interest in the concept of perception; the ways of processing information, and “logic” how it is culturally promised; just the general ideology of how we communicate. My theme is not inspired by culture A nor culture B , but rather the transition between A and B, then B to A, and in-between zone. It had functioned as a gear to spark my curiosity, like the hidden rule beneath communication itself.

    These parts gradually became two branches, temporality and perception. Over time, they merged into a more coherent methodology. My Sequence Paintings (Making-Film), contain presence arranged in order, seeking to be communicated as a dialogue.

    The Sequence Painting layered by overpainting, and my Effacement technique, which paradoxically removes to reveal, serve to highlight the intertwined or twisted layers as time containing elements, a three-dimensional collision. Depending on how the viewer reads them, the order can follow the logic of creation or twist into new perceptual sequences. There is a chronological order, but the viewer also can choose alternative pathways.

    Effacement became a pivotal breakthrough in my practice. Rather than adding more paint to affirm presence, I began removing material to re-awaken previous events embedded within the work. This act of erasure is not destruction but revelation; to efface is to excavate. It allows the hidden past to speak again, not as nostalgia, but as a renewed temporal consciousness.

    Conventional painting often prioritizes covering, sealing, or finalizing a surface. But I found that full coverage erases the history of the work, burying the very time that gives it meaning. My approach therefore shifted toward a leaner methodology, so that earlier layers remain perceptible. Each visible trace becomes an ethical choice: how much of the past must remain in order for the present to be understood?

    In recent years, several professional artists, graduate-level art students, and material researchers have reached out and visited my studio to learn aspects of the Effacement technique. I have also begun offering small workshop sessions to demonstrate its process in person. These visits often evolve into in-depth discussions about layered temporality, the ethics of erasure, and structural approaches to non-linear time in painting. It has been meaningful to see the methodology extend beyond my own practice and participate in broader conversations within contemporary abstraction and material-based research.

    The first mark may reappear only at the final moment of viewing, like discovering the first alphabet at the end of a sentence. By resisting total coverage and painting in a deliberately lean way, I preserve the chronology of creation. What seems to be the present is always intertwined with what came before, forming a temporal loop in which past and future continually reawaken one another.

    OOlda-5, 2022, Paper collage, water color and acrylic, etched wood canvas, 45 x 53 cm

    What is your creative process like? Do you follow a routine or work spontaneously?

    I believe all things are about balance in nature of the universe, all in the conversation about balance, whether the “transitioning” from in-balance to balance or maintaining certain ratio of balance, negotiating imbalance, which all can create certain energy, and that is where I get so and so called inspiration.

    My process involves cultivating quietness through sketching and prayer, which creates a calm, pond-like wavelength. And sometimes the energy burst out-from-my intention, I call it a “whoosh”, when it hits, I surrender to it completely and let it do its job until it dries out. Art is so blunt in this way that audience often sense it with me. I value routine, but I also respect spontaneity. Together, they form the ecology in which my work is created.

    Dai Shii, 2024, Acrylic on canvas, 50 x 60 cm

    How has your artistic style evolved over time?

    A recent shift occurred when I transitioned from New York to Seoul. Completing my BFA at Cooper Union strengthened my theoretical grounding. After that my individual practice moved to pure application of the painting in Art. The painting’s methodology, materiality became a part of a structured engagement with time, sequence, and erasure.

    Visual art is often consumed in a single instant, while books, theatre, and cinema are experienced linearly. My practice breaks this ‘one-second consumption’ inherent to painting by integrating cinematic temporality, sequential imagery, and filmic sensibility. In this way, the painting becomes quasi-cinematic, time-based, durational, and unfolding.

    This direction shaped by an interest in philosophical order, structural power, and the logic of the universe. The core of my practice is no longer purely introspective; it has expanded from a microscopic inner voice to a macro-structural frame that examines systems, perception, temporality, and cognition. Again, My interest is in how origin and conclusion can collapse into one another.

    Wilti Walu, 2024, Acrylic on canvas, 61 x 73 cm

    How do you approach exhibiting your work? What are your goals when showing your art in public spaces?

    I was initially hesitant to exhibit my artworks publicly, but that changed when several of my paintings were featured in the Korean drama ‘Moon in the Day’, now available on Netflix. More than ten of my artworks were broadcast, generating unexpected engagement with diverse audiences and extending my practice beyond traditional art spaces. The series achieved international top-8 rankings, showing me the unique capacity of media to circulate art through new channels.

    Since then, I have embraced interdisciplinary collaborations, film, media, design, and other cultural interfaces that allow painting to migrate into expanded contexts.

    BB2-9, 2022, Acrylic on wood canvas, 45 x 45 cm

    What role do you believe art plays in social and cultural change?

    I believe Art is everywhere. One blink of an eye will show you tons of Art. Or even eye-closed can be seen once knowing the spectrum of Art. Once someone learns to perceive art, it will be hard to be unseen again.

    Art can hold voice, spirit and time. It holds the period we might forget and preserves the consciousness of a moment. Art influenced in all academia and has historical consciousness. It makes us to acknowledge where we stand, who we are, and what chronology of past moments constructed our present. These questions form a pattern that allows us to perceive what is yet to come.The appreciation of Art should not only come from emotional resonance; it should also invite intellectual engagement. Art challenges us to think, perceive, and re-experience the world.

    Text & photo courtesy of Ayana Hanbich Lee

    Website: https://www.ayanalee.com/
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ayanalee.art/


  • Situated Stories International Juried Exhibition

    Situated Stories International Juried Exhibition

    Poster Credit: Asian Art Contemporary

    Situated Stories: International Juried Exhibition brings together artists from across the globe whose practices explore the power of narrative through diverse media—painting, photography, digital works, installation, and more. Each artist offers a distinct perspective shaped by personal history, cultural context, or lived experience. Their stories unfold through varied approaches, from reconstructing memory to examining identity, belonging, and transformation, revealing the many ways narratives can be formed, challenged, or reimagined in contemporary art.

    Presented by Asian Art Contemporary, this exhibition highlights the depth and range of Asian artistic voices on the international stage. By centering storytelling as both subject and method, Situated Stories invites viewers to encounter connections across different cultures and mediums, while celebrating artists who expand how we understand and experience the world through their situated, resonant, and inventive narratives.

    Title

    Situated Stories

    Date

    December 1, 2025 – February 20, 2026

    Selected Artists

    Jieun Cheon, Matthew Chung, Nina Kuo, Vân Anh Lê, Ayana Hanbich Lee, Camille Li, Katherine Tzu-Lan Mann, Mizuki Nishiyama, Avani Patel, Mitchell Poon, Devishi Seth, Fengzee Yang

    Juror

    Carol Paik, Phil Zheng Cai

    Exhibition Assistant

    Katherine Li, Jianing Lu

    Exhibitor

    Asian Art Contemporary

    Guest Juror

    CAROL PAIK is a mixed-media artist based in New York, working primarily with repurposed materials. Her goal is to create art from the unappreciated, overlooked, landfill-destined stuff she finds around her, of which there is never a shortage. She is interested in the emotions we bring to the things we discard:  nostalgia, guilt, desire, and loss, and her goal is to give these objects–and, by extension, ourselves—new possibilities.

    Her work has been shown recently at the Hudson River Museum in Yonkers, NY; Galerie Étienne de Causans in Paris, France; Brooklyn Waterfront Artists Coalition in Brooklyn, NY; Westbeth Gallery in NY, NY; Silvermine Gallery in New Canaan, CT; Yellow Studio Gallery in Cross River, NY; and the SVA Flatiron Gallery in NY, NY.

    https://www.instagram.com/capaik670/
    https://www.carolpaik.com

    Phil Zheng Cai (American, b. Shanghai) is a curator and writer based in New York. He graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Madison with a BA in Social Science, and received his MA from Sotheby’s Institute of Art. He has held posts at Mary Boone Gallery, Phillips Auctioneers, and is currently a partner at Eli Klein Gallery.

    Phil Cai’s curated exhibitions have received critical acclaim. His curated exhibition “(In)directions: Queerness in Chinese Contemporary Photography” was reviewed by Hyperallergic, Musee Magazine, Asian American Arts Alliance AMP Magazine, and many others. His curated exhibition “Alienation?” was reviewed by the Brooklyn Rail. He has participated in panel discussions and talks at institutions such as the Asia Society Museum New York, the SCAD Museum of Art, Columbia University, Sotheby’s Institute of Art, among others. His independent curatorial initiative Open Kitchen focuses on systematic critique. Its most recent iteration “Open Kitchen – Fusion” was reviewed by IMPULSE Magazine.

    Phil Zheng Cai’s writings are regularly published. His exhibition review “The Estate of Joshua Caleb Weibley at CHART Gallery asks if we still want to play” was recently published in WhiteHot Magazine. His interview with Bojan Stojcic “A Mirrored Interview” was published in IMPULSE Magazine. His exhibition reviews “A Proposal to Live with What Had Been There – Cynthia Gutiérrez at Museo de Arte Carrillo Gil”; “Enacting Disassociation – Jean-Luc Moulène Solo Exhibition at Miguel Abreu Gallery”; “Life as an Invitation – Yoan Capote Solo Exhibition at Jack Shainman Gallery” and critical essay “Take a Step: Phil Zheng Cai on the Opening of M+ Museum” were featured in the Widewalls Magazine.

    His translated book “The Story of Philosophy” was published by Shanghai Yuandong Press in 2020. His critical text “Everything can become an NFT, is it true?” was published by the New York Time T Magazine China. His essay “Nomad Photography” was published in the Parsons MFA Photo thesis catalog in 2024.

    Phil Zheng Cai currently works and lives in New York, and can be reached via email at philzhengcai@gmail.com.

    https://www.instagram.com/phil.z.cai/
    https://philzhengcai.com

    Selected Artworks

    Matthew Chung, Grappling Masculinity, 2023, Denim fabric, thread, 131 x 76 x 37 cm, Courtesy of the artist and Gallery 46 (First Place)

    Mizuki Nishiyama, Kan’nabi (The Mountain Gods), 2023, Mixed media tapestry, 250 x 130 cm (Second Place)

    Jieun Cheon, The Anti Fractal Map I, 2024, Pen drawing, installation, 57.5 x 57.5 x 6.5 in

    Ayana Hanbich Lee, OOlda series 5, 2023, Acrylic and water color with collage elements on wood panel, 18 x 21 in

    Mitchell Poon, Mothholes I, 2024, Silkscreen and mezzotint on BFK Rives, Image 12 x 12 in; Paper 14 x 14 in

    Katherine Tzu-Lan Mann, The Pocket, 2024, Dimensions variable (Second Place)

    Fengzee Yang, Where Goes the Wheel of Fortune, 2023, Wood, stoneware (Second Place)

    Fengzee Yang, A Chunk of Angel, 2024, Stoneware (Second Place)

    Nina Kuo and Lorin Roser, Living Machina, 2024, Digital Image, 5 ft x 10 in, Courtesy the artists N. Kuo & L. Roser

    Vân Anh Lê, ENDLESS SEA, 2024, Video with sound, 3 min 19 sec

    Camille Li, Memory Mental Bullying, 2023, Wool yarn, E-Wire, nylon cable, 23.6 x 23.6 x 70.9 in

    Avani Patel, Transition of Nature, 2024, Acrylic and paint marker on canvas, 36 x 72 in

    Devishi Seth, Mukti – set me free, 2023, Bronze, 11 x 8 in

    Selected Artists

    Jieun Cheon https://www.uncanishedworkld.com

    Matthew Chung https://chungmatthew.com

    Nina Kuo https://www.videosoundarchive.com

    Vân Anh Lê https://vananh.space

    Ayana Hanbich Lee www.ayanalee.com

    Camille Li https://lipeiyang2001.wixsite.com

    Katherine Tzu-Lan Mann http://www.katherinemann.net

    Mizuki Nishiyama https://www.mizukinishiyama.com

    Avani Patel https://www.avanirpatel.com

    Mitchell Poon https://www.mitchellpoon.com

    Devishi Seth devishiseth.com

    Fengzee Yang https://www.fengzeeyang.com

    Artwork information and images courtesy of the artists.


  • Interview | Munich-Based Artist Wang Xuan

    Interview | Munich-Based Artist Wang Xuan

    Wang Xuan (b. 1979, Guangxi) graduated from the Guangxi Art Institute in 2002. In 2011 he graduated from the National Academy of Plastic Arts in Karlsruhe, Germany, where he studied under Prof Erwin Gross, and received his Master’s degree. He currently lives and works in Munich, Germany.

    Wang combines classic images from European and Chinese art with everyday items in his work. He mixes unrelated things in unexpected ways, making classical icons seem out of place and time. His style blends traditional art with a modern touch that might give the impression of mistakes but surprisingly creates a balanced effect. His images become more like symbols than specific messages. In doing so, Wang’s art focuses more on his personal expression rather than carrying deep, philosophical meanings.

    Recent exhibitions include: “The Story of a Dream”, CLC Gallery Venture, Beijing, CN; “Echo of Light”,Blunt Soociety, Shanghai,China,2024;SCI-FI DOOMSDAY , LOST IN WONDERLAND (Part 4)”, Shekou Gallery x SWALLOW, Shenzhen, CN, 2024; “Xinkang Restaurant”, Blunt Society, Shanghai, CN, 2024; “Lichterstapel”, Imke Valentien Gallery,Stuttgart, DE, 2023; “START 22”, Goldberg Gallery, Munich, DE, 2022; “4a Biennale di Genova”, Genova, IT, 2021; “XUAN WANG. Gemalt”, St. Gertrude Gallery,Hamburg, DE, 2020; “Document”, Goldberg Gallery, Munich, DE, 2020; “In Auflosung ̈ ”, Germany Tuttlingen City Museum, DE, 2019, “GeSchichten”, Valentien Gallery, Stuttgart, DE, 2019; “Malerei auf Papier ”, Goldberg Gallery,Munich, DE, 2018; “Ratsel ̈ – Malerei auf Papier ”, St.Gertrude Gallery, Hamburg, DE, 2017; “reFORM”,National Museum of Baden,Stuttgart,DE, 2016; “Fragmente”, Kunststiftung Baden, Stuttgart,DE, 2015; “Invisible Cities”, Kunstmuseum Freiburg, DE, 2014; “China im Spiegel der Zeit – Kunst aus 5 Jahrtausenden”, Messmer Art Museum, DE, 2014. His works have been collected by private collectors in Europe, Asia and the US as well as by public institutions such as the Museum of Modern Art, Stuttgart, Germany, and the Kunsthalle, Tuttlingen, Germany.

    Untitled, 2025, Acrylic and mineral pigments on canvas, 160 x 120 cm, Courtesy of the artist and CLC Gallery Venture

    Can you tell us about your background and how you began your artistic journey?

    After graduating from high school, I entered the Oil Painting Department at Guangxi Arts Institute, where I received four years of rigorous academic training. After graduation, I wanted to go to Germany, as I was deeply fascinated by German Expressionism at the time. In 2005, I began my studies at an art academy in Germany, where I continued to refine my artistic practice. After completing my studies, I became a professional artist.

    Looking back, every failure I experienced has contributed to the development of my artistic practice. Those moments of setback became opportunities that taught me how to engage in a dialogue with both the world and history.

    Untitled, 2025, Acrylic and mineral pigments on canvas, 60 x 50 cm, Courtesy of the artist and CLC Gallery Venture

    What are the main themes or concepts you explore in your work?

    I juxtapose iconic imagery from classical European oil paintings and traditional Chinese art with ordinary, everyday objects. Through what I call an “indiscriminate placement,” I reorganize these unrelated elements to defamiliarize classical imagery and blur their historical context.

    My works create an illusion—something that at first glance appears to be a “normal painting,” but upon closer inspection feels subtly “off.” The meticulous details, restrained use of materials, and the deliberate “absence” of brushstrokes invite viewers to question: Is this a damaged or misprinted reproduction?

    Classical images from art history intertwine with still-life motifs, while the seemingly “malfunctioning” traces of paint along the edges appear absurd yet harmonious. These effects situate the depicted objects in a state of ambiguous eternity—a space that feels both chaotic and timeless.

    Untitled, 2024, Acrylic and mineral pigment on canvas, 60 x 50 cm, Courtesy of the artist and CLC Gallery Venture

    How do you keep yourself inspired and motivated to create new works?

    My motivation for creating art and exploring the spiritual world comes from my deep curiosity about world history and other fields of knowledge—such as astronomy and mysticism. I’m not particularly interested in whether or not I “have inspiration.” When ideas accumulate to a certain point, a new work naturally begins and continues until it reaches completion. If I find that I can no longer control it, I simply start over.

    Untitled, 2025, Acrylic and mineral pigments on canvas, 80 x 65 cm, Courtesy of the artist and CLC Gallery Venture

    Could you describe a recent project or artwork that you are particularly proud of?

    My recent solo exhibition, The Story of a Dream, is currently on view at CLC Gallery Venture in Beijing, where I am presenting a new body of work created over the past two years.

    Installation view of The Story of a Dream, Courtesy of the artist and CLC Gallery Venture

    As an artist, what challenges do you face, and how do you overcome them?

    My goal is never limited to the visual itself. I am constantly thinking about how to reveal what lies beyond the surface of imitation. This is the most difficult part to deal with. To me, the visual is more like a game—something arranged by chance—yet it sometimes points to things that cannot be described.

    I believe the greatest challenge for an artist is to remain calm amid the overwhelming vortex of social and economic forces. What I must learn to do is to keep a certain distance.

    Untitled, 2025, Acrylic and mineral pigments on canvas, 60 x 50 cm, Courtesy of the artist and CLC Gallery Venture

    What do you hope people take away from experiencing your artwork?

    I hope viewers interpret my paintings in their own way. Each person perceives something different in my work, as my intention is to create illusions and provoke questions.

    Art is constantly being defined, reconstructed, and transcended—both through the artist’s creative process and through the diverse ways in which viewers engage with it.

    Text & images courtesy of Wang Xuan

    Website: https://www.xuanwang.de/
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/xuan1wang/


  • Interview | London-Based Artist Jiwon Cha

    Interview | London-Based Artist Jiwon Cha

    Jiwon Cha lives and works in London. She earned her BFA in Painting from RISD and her MA in Painting from the Royal College of Art. She has recently had a solo presentation at The Armory Show in New York with Baert Gallery (2025) and her recent exhibition includes Birth of the Between: The Infinite Interchange, Latitude Gallery, New York (2025), The Torrent and the Fold, LBF Contemporary, London (2025), A Journey into the Unknown, Haricot Gallery, London (2025). She had her first solo exhibition An Eternity From Now, in Baert Gallery, Los Angeles (2024).

    Cha’s painting focuses on re-articulating the sublime in the 21st century. This re-articulation concentrates on what evokes the feeling of sublimity and finds a way to process these complex emotions of uncertainties that hold a place both in our personal lives and in a bigger construction of society. Emphasizing the circumstances of “unknown” and of “loss of control”, her paintings are dedicated to capturing the contradicting feelings of hope and despair, constantly questioning the existence of fate.

    He hopes for an eternity from now, 2024, Oil on canvas, 200 x 300 cm

    Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?

    I was born in South Korea to parents who were both active in the art world—both as artists and art professors. From a young age, I loved to draw and paint, but it wasn’t until high school that I began to seriously consider painting as a professional path. Before then, I had been pursuing a career in classical music, attending Yewon Art Middle School as a violinist. My formal education in painting began during my undergraduate studies at the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD) in USA. After completing my degree, I went on to earn a Master’s in Painting from the Royal College of Art (RCA) in London. Since graduating in 2023, I have been living and working in London.

    Forsythia, 2025, Distemper and oil on linen, 100 x 100 cm

    What are the main themes or concepts you explore in your work?

    My work expands across and explores a range of themes – from emotion to fantasy, sublimity and spirituality, to beauty and anxiety. While the focus may shift from piece to piece, I believe there is always a consistent inquiry into the sublime at the heart of my practice. More precisely, I think of my works as inquiries or portraits of sublimity in today’s time. This ongoing search for something beyond the visible or tangible runs through all of my work, regardless of subject or form.

    Night and Day, 2025, Distemper and oil on linen, 150 x 200 cm

    How has your artistic style evolved over time?

    Over time, I’ve realized that a central focus in my practice is being honest with my emotions-allowing them to seep into my work and reveal themselves through the process of painting. In my earlier works, I was more research based and focused on conveying a specific viewpoint or narrative. Now, I try to move away from description and instead concentrate on expressing feeling and energy. I aim to embrace the full complexity of my emotional landscape, the contradictions and tensions, the moments of hope and despair, happiness and contempt, love and loneliness. These layered emotions form the core of my work, often emerging in unexpected ways as I paint.

    The stain of you becomes a fondness, 2025, Graphite and oil on canvas, 120 x 150 cm

    How do you stay inspired and motivated to create new work?

    I think life itself keeps me inspired and motivated. I spend a lot of time in nature going to forests, parks and beaches. The movements of the branches moving along the wind, leaves rustling or the floras blooming and withering, the color of the berries ripening, they give me inspiration to create new works.

    Bouquet of memories, 2025, Acrylic and oil on canvas, 150 x 200 cm

    What do you hope people take away from your art when they experience it?

    I don’t believe you can control how people will feel when they encounter an artwork. Each person brings their own experiences, memories, and current state of mind to the work, which naturally shapes how they perceive it. For me, if my paintings succeed in evoking any kind of emotion – whether uplifting or somber – that in itself is meaningful. I also find it deeply rewarding when viewers spend time with the work, noticing and reflecting on the different elements: the mark-making, the shapes, the colors. It’s in those quiet, attentive moments of looking from the audience that I appreciate.

    When in Rome, 2025, Distemper and oil on linen, 170 x 130 cm

    How do you balance artistic integrity with commercial considerations?

    The commercial aspect of art is something I can’t ignore, as making a sustainable living through my practice is essential. I also genuinely value the opportunity to share my work with a wider audience, and I am deeply grateful for the collectors and galleries who support me and believe in what I do.

    At the same time, I think that it is important to ensure that commercial considerations don’t begin to dictate the direction of one’s artistic practice. For me, staying true to my inner voice is essential. I need to create work that I am proud of – work that feels necessary, that arises from within, and that reflects how I truly feel. One thing I often remind myself is not to be afraid of change, and to stay focused on making better, more honest work – regardless of external expectations.

    Text & photo courtesy of Jiwon Cha

    Website: https://jiwonchastudio.squarespace.com
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jcha_artac


  • Interview | Singapore-Based Artist Quan Lim

    Interview | Singapore-Based Artist Quan Lim

    Quan Lim (b. 1996, Singapore) is a contemporary painter whose practice examines identity, displacement, and the instability of narrative through a wide range of motifs drawn from art history, mythology, film, and everyday life. His works interlace fictional and historical threads to stage scenes that are at once surreal and immediate. Shifting between figuration and abstraction, Lim layers, erases, and reconstitutes surfaces of carefully rendered figures and gestural mark-making, mirroring the fragmented complexity of contemporary existence.

    Lim received his BFA in Painting from the Maryland Institute College of Art, Baltimore, in 2022. His recent solo exhibitions include The Flood, Cuturi Gallery, Singapore (2025), and Daffodil, Singapore (2023). He has also participated in group exhibitions in Singapore and the United States. In 2013, he was awarded the United Overseas Bank Painting of the Year Award (Emerging Artist Category, Singapore), recognizing him as the Most Promising Artist of the Year. His work is represented in both public and private collections, and he continues to expand his presence in the Southeast Asian contemporary art landscape through an active program of solo and group presentations.

    Stony Sleep, 2025, Oil on canvas, 121.9 x 152.4 cm, Courtesy of the artist and Cuturi Gallery, Singapore

    Can you tell us about your background and how you started your artistic journey?

    As a kid I was obsessed with comics and magazines like Shonen Jump. What captivated me most were the trading card games such as Yu-Gi-Oh! — they felt like tiny intricate paintings. I remember holding them close to my face, completely absorbed by the details. That was probably my first real love for images. I began drawing characters obsessively, filling every page until there was no blank space left. My classmates wanted my drawings so much that they began collecting and even trading them among themselves. What stayed with me wasn’t the drawings themselves, it was the excitement they created in others. That was the first time I realized that making images could connect me to people — and in many ways, that hasn’t changed.

    Lost Eye, 2025, Oil on canvas, 152.4 x 121.9 cm, Courtesy of the artist and Cuturi Gallery, Singapore

    What are the main themes or concepts you explore in your paintings?

    My grandparents migrated from China to Singapore in the early 1900s, bringing with them their language, customs, and beliefs. Growing up under a predominantly Western education system that often marginalized these traditions, I found myself unable to speak their dialect, while they could not speak the English I was taught in school. This meant I could not share in their daily lives, let alone their stories, memories, and histories. A large part of my past felt inaccessible, and I grew up with a persistent sense of absence in understanding my own identity.

    Over time, this distance led me to think about myth and its role in shaping how we understand ourselves — the stories we inherit to explain where we came from, who we are, and where we might be going. That early experience of being between cultures — placeless, disoriented, fragmented — continues to shape my work. It made me aware of how identity is constantly formed and reformed through storytelling, and how personal memory and collective history overlap, collide, and transform into new identities.

    How has your artistic style evolved over time?

    Over time my practice has shifted toward a more spontaneous and layered way of working. In the studio, I’m surrounded by references, images, sketches, and fragments from earlier pieces. The process has become rather spontaneous: I try to keep it loose and not hold on too dearly to an image. It’s layers and layers wiped away, painted over, destroyed, built again—like recovering something from ruins. Drawn from countless references, it’s a fragmented way of painting and of seeing the world.

    Bird Shadows, 2025, Oil on canvas, 121.9 x 152.4 cm, Courtesy of the artist and Cuturi Gallery, Singapore

    Can you describe a recent project or artwork that you are particularly proud of?

    I’ve been working on a body of large paintings for my major solo exhibition The Flood. The project draws from flood myths across cultures. What struck me in these myths was how often they promised a hero, a sense of renewal, or a triumphant rebirth — as if disaster were always preordained to resolve with redemption. In contrast, when I looked at other depictions of catastrophe, such as Géricault’s Raft of the Medusa, I found something far less consoling: figures clambering over one another in desperation, enacting the brutal reality of survival. I became fascinated by this tension between mythical and historical narratives of disaster, and how they reveal the fragile borders between self and other. These stories, whether cyclical or fractured, continue to shape us as readers of history and as witnesses to the present.

    I began to imagine the animals on Noah’s Ark not as peaceful survivors but in a similar state of frenzy and tragedy — overcrowded, colliding, swept together into a torrent of hunger and excess. The paintings take shape as densely staged tableaux, at once allegorical and chaotic. Their titles are inspired by W. B. Yeats’s The Second Coming, a poem that evokes the collapse of hope in moments of upheaval. For me, not every narrative resolves with redemption. Sometimes things spiral downward, and it is in that tension — between survival and ruin, order and collapse — that I want the work to remain.

    Last Hour, 2025, Oil on canvas, 121.9 x 152.4 cm, Courtesy of the artist and Cuturi Gallery, Singapore

    What challenges have you faced as an artist, and how have you overcome them?

    When I’m creating, I often become absorbed in the flow of making, following where the work seems to lead. The process can be intense, at times disorienting, and what unsettles me most is the sheer number of possibilities an artwork could take. In the end, I have to trust my instincts and let the work guide me. For me, the process is always a negotiation between restraint and excess, clarity and disorder — and it is within that tension that the work comes alive.

    What do you hope people take away from your art when they experience it?

    I like that people can see their own stories and memories in the images — that they recognize something of themselves within them. An image is never fixed; it can remain fluid, slipping between different meanings. I’m drawn to that tension between freedom and control, between the multiple ways a single image can be perceived. Within abstraction there is always a visceral pull, a sense of undoing and rebuilding. I want the viewer not simply to look at the work, but to find themselves caught inside its shifting spectacle.

    Text & photo courtesy of Quan Lim

    Website: https://quanlimstudio.com
    Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/artbyquan/


  • Tang Contemporary Art Presents Seeking in the Interstices, a Solo Exhibition by Tos Suntos

    Tang Contemporary Art Presents Seeking in the Interstices, a Solo Exhibition by Tos Suntos

    Poster credit: Tang Contemporary Art

    Identity, culture, belief, and faith do not always emerge at once. They take shape gradually, eventually becoming the foundation of lives through traditions, art, language, and everyday practices. Over time, these layers form the basis of how we come to understand ourselves and others. Belief often marks the beginning of this process; when it becomes unwavering, it transforms into faith, a deeper conviction that shapes values, attitudes, and ways of living. Culture, therefore, is more than an external form. It is a reservoir of belief and faith that operates beneath consciousness. It is within this terrain that Tos Suntos turns to the visual, as a means to reflect on questions of identity, faith, and freedom.

    Raised in a Thai family, Tos Suntos was immersed from childhood in an environment where Buddhism intertwined with folk traditions. Over the years, these beliefs became invisible codes of conduct, quietly shaping his earliest sense of morality and value. Temples, architectural spaces, and ritual objects were once seen as protective “shields,” offering safety in daily life while also defining subtle boundaries of thought. With adolescence, however, came the influence of the digital age and increasingly diverse social interactions, which placed his inherited system of faith in sharp conflict with the demands of modern society. To adapt into society, one often cultivates an “artificial self.” For Tos Suntos, this inner dissonance went beyond personal identity. It raised a larger question: how might one navigate the structures of faith and society without being confined by them? This has since become the central aesthetic and philosophical pursuit of his practice.

    Tos Suntos, Trapped in the Structure of Belief, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 200 x 180 cm

    Much of his work is driven by this pursuit. At its core, is Enimous, a symbolic alter ego that embodies the artist’s negotiation with these tensions. Enimous appears trapped within rigid architectural frames or distorted by geometric grids, visible yet obstructed, as if caught behind transparent walls. Tos Suntos describes this state as being “imprisoned within the system of faith.” The phrase extends beyond religion to include the norms, values, and languages that society internalizes in us. In his writings, he asks: “Can we have faith without being stuck or buried in it? Can we have our own identity without merging with the one that is defined by society?” In works such as Trapped in the Structure of Belief and Layers of Class, Enimous is elongated, repeated, or twisted, producing a visual instability that resonates with the identity anxieties of contemporary life.

    Tos Suntos, Bound Freedom, 2025, Acrylic on canvas, 120 x 150 cm

    Visually, Tos Suntos has developed a distinctive language. He weaves together traditional Thai motifs, mythological figures, and symbols from popular culture, merging them into compositions that feel both familiar yet new and estranged. Rather than denouncing adaptation or imitation, he presents them with quiet clarity, acknowledging their underlying existence in daily life. The exhibition does not claim to offer solutions for freedom. Instead, it creates a space of reflection through its visual propositions. As the artist notes: “This series of works does not judge right or wrong but invites viewers to reconsider themselves within these invisible structures.” In this openness, his work transcends personal narrative and becomes a site for audiences to project their own experiences.

    Ultimately, Tos Suntos’ practice unfolds as both an intimate dialogue with the self and a structural probing of the collective subconscious. While rooted in the cultural soil of Thailand, his art speaks to dilemmas that resonate more broadly today: the tension between faith and doubt, structure and freedom, the individual and the system. By opening up the very frameworks we often take as fixed—such as faith, culture, and class— Tos Suntos reveals what lies beneath them, not certainties, but the unexamined unknowns.

    Venue
    Tang Contemporary Art Bangkok, Room 201 – 206, River City Bangkok, 23 Soi Charoenkrung 24, Talad Noi, Sampantawong, Bangkok, 10100 

    Artist
    Tos Suntos

    Exhibition Dates
    October 18 – November 23, 2025

    Gallery Hours
    Tuesday – Sunday | 11 AM – 7 PM

    Website
    https://www.tangcontemporary.com/

    Instagram
    https://www.instagram.com/tangcontemporaryartbangkok/

    Contact
    bkk@tangcontemporary.com


    About Artist

    Tos Suntos (Panyawat Phitaksawan) (b. 1992, Bangkok, Thailand) is a Thai Artist and Designer known for his unconventional style applied to both his 2D and 3D creations, expressed in a variety of forms such as painting, digital art, collages and sculptures. His works have evolved through time, but consistently combine elements of Thai culture or traditions, with more contemporary and universal elements of monsters and pop culture.

    The artist first gained increased recognition when he was commissioned to create works for the Adidas Headquarters, as a representative of Thailand.  His work has always reflected modern culture and lifestyle, combined with his experience and childhood memories.  When he was young, Tos Suntos was interested in sci-fi films and other worldly creatures, bringing him to incorporate these elements in his work, combined with observations of pop culture and retro styles. 

    About Gallery

    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)