Monument, 1993

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This work features two large masses—one a shadow of the other. The dark form in the foreground is made up of repeated dabs of ink, growing drier at the center. Behind it, a light form is rendered in a similar manner, though in reverse. This time, wet brushstrokes begin at the center and grow drier moving outwards. The painting, with its dark and light forms, echoing one another, suggests the Daoist concept of yin and yang.

 

© Yan Binghui, photo: Maurice Aeschimann, Geneva

Vessel 08-C, Vessel 08-G, 2008

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Kitamura Junko is a pioneering ceramist whose conceptually daring works extend the medium far beyond traditional rules of functionality. These signature works by the artist, stonewares decorated with painstakingly intricate lacelike patterns, exemplify her production methods. The minuscule concentric dots and geometric indentations suggest snowflakes, celestial constellations, or Japanese textile patterns. Kitamura instills her patterning with what she describes as “both quiet and powerful movement, some [designs] slow and delicate and others fast and bold.”

 

Fingerprint 2007, 2007

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Zhang Yu’s signature fingerprint paintings are at once self-portraits, rubbings, and meditations. The artist repeatedly presses his finger print into his paper, commonly using red or black ink, but in this case, only water. Employing his fingerprint as a stamp, Zhang creates a textured surface in his water-only pieces, the trace of the action here conveyed through the indentation of the paper, as opposed to the stamped ink.

 

© Zhang Yu, photo: Maurice Aeschimann, Geneva

Ecriture No. 080222, 2008

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Created nearly four decades into the development of Park’s Seo-Bo’s Ecriture series, this piece acts as a record of the artist’s repeated action, creating shallow furrows in wet hanji paper, an act of meditative self-emptying. In the center of the work Park embeds a “breathing hole,” a break from his signature furrows that allows the eye and the spirit a place of rest and emptiness.

 

© Park Seo-Bo, photos courtesy of the artist and Kukje Gallery, Seoul

Possessing Numerous Peaks nºS–1226, 2012

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Huang Zhiyang began his Possessing Numerous Peaks series after moving to Beijing in 2006, inspired by the towering mountains that surround the city. He sees these mountains as dragons, the undulating grooves in the sculptures embodying the flow of their qi, or energy, running through and around their bodies. Huang’s interest in the flow of qi is also central to the artist’s ink painting practice.

 

© Huang Zhiyang, photo: Maurice Aeschimann, Geneva

Let Me Become the Universe’s Plaything, 2018

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Bingyi leaves the scale of this painting intentionally ambiguous: Let Me Become might be showing us microscopic cells, blossoming flowers, or the entirety of the ever-expanding universe. This piece is a part of Bingyi’s series of paintings related to the notion of wanwu (roughly translated as “myriad things”). She considers this artwork an object of meditation, connecting different viewers through a shared experience and creating a space for deep contemplation.

 

© Bingyi, photo: Maurice Aeschimann, Geneva

Torn, 2009

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Shirazeh Houshiary’s artworks are often produced by the diligent layering of pencil lines paired with acrylic or Aquacryl pigment. In Torn, serrated lines emanate in a spiral, forming a translucent veil. The veil, or membrane, is a recurring motif in her practice and can be seen as a metaphor for the barrier that shields us from our awareness of our own existence. Transcending above the influence of any one religion, Houshiary’s artworks exude an unmistakably spiritual quality

 

Untitled, 1999

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Max Cole’s artworks engulf the viewer in the infinite possibilities of the mind. Her practice is underscored by a sense of harmony and serenity produced through repetitive, freehand mark-making reminiscent of a hypnotic, spiritual chant. She spends hours diligently drawing precise lines, allowing her compositions time to unfold through her motions. Cole’s works can be seen as allusions to her childhood, recalling her time spent in the flat, expansive plains of the Southwest.

 

© Max Cole, photo: Maurice Aeschimann, Geneva

Bataille aux cratères (Battle at the Craters), 2014

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While the images presented in many of Ophélie Asch's paintings are structurally and visually ambiguous, Bataille aux craters is one of a series of works that have been compared to images of ruins—they often appear to depict structures that are either shattered or crushed, or are reminiscent of fossils. Asch creates a vision of a dreamlike world infused with things like interwoven branches and twigs, subterranean mycorrhizal networks, and frantic swarms of insects.

From Point, 1978

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The slow and deliberate mark-making process constitutes a record of the artist’s bodily movements. Short, hooked marks with blurred edges are applied methodically to plain paper. Their slight variation within the grid is rhythmic, almost musical. By using minimal gestures to occupy and transform space, Lee applies the concept of blank-leaving (liu bai), a Chinese aesthetic principle where areas are intentionally left untouched, adapting it into his own visual language of minimalism.