Art has often been understood as something to be viewed from a respectful distance. The history of exhibition spaces, from the grand halls of Renaissance palaces to the white rooms of the modern gallery, has frequently emphasised the ability of the viewer to take in an entire composition with a single glance. The distant gaze privileges proportion, symmetry, and the overall unity of form, shaping art into an image that can be grasped at once. Yet this exhibition proposes another way of looking, one that begins not with distance but with closeness. It asks the viewer to step forward and to dwell in the nearness where hidden worlds slowly unfold, much like words whispered too softly to be heard from across the room.
From this proximity, what first appeared as a single image reveals itself as something more intricate and layered. A delicate brushstroke becomes visible, a subtle relief rises on the surface, pigments dissolve or concentrate in unexpected ways, and threads of fabric or paper fibres draw colour into their textures like roots pulling water into the earth. These are qualities that do not announce themselves from afar. They require an act of intimacy, a willingness to remain with the work until it yields what cannot be seen at first sight. Within this nearness, the artwork becomes not simply an image but a microcosm, a world that contains its own fragile scale of meaning and presence.
The paintings, drawings, textiles, and installations gathered here invite precisely this kind of encounter. To approach them closely is not only to discover detail but also to sense the time and breath embedded within the work. The gestures of the artist’s hand, sometimes barely visible, become animated when seen at short range, while the smallest shift in tone or texture acquires an unexpected resonance, as though the surface were still in motion. Such moments remind us that art is never inert. It continues to live in the meeting between viewer and surface, in the quiet recognition of details that otherwise slip past unnoticed.
The title Intimacies Beyond Distance names this experience. The intimacy offered here is not bound to size or material. It emerges through the act of attention, in the closeness that allows the viewer to perceive how even the most modest mark can open into a space of thought and feeling. Art history has often privileged the monumental, celebrating works whose power lies in their scale or grandeur. Yet this exhibition suggests that significance may also reside in the subtle, the minute, and the almost imperceptible. To stand near is to enter these hidden territories, where small textures expand into fields of experience and reshape the relation between artwork and observer.
What is discovered in closeness ultimately transforms the meaning of distance. The exhibition does not deny the value of the whole view, but it shows that the most profound encounters often arise when one chooses to cross the threshold of distance and step into the quiet, almost private, space of intimacy. In this sense, the works gathered here remind us that art is not only about what is seen but about how it is seen, and that every act of looking carries the possibility of discovering an entire world within a single surface.
EXHIBITING WORKS
![]() Gabriel CheahJust Bloom II Acrylic, hand-moulded ceramic, European crystals 23 x 13 x 19 cm 2024 | ![]() Gabriel CheahJust Bloom II Acrylic, hand-mouldedmodeling clay, European crystals on canvas 91.44 x 121.92 cm 2024 | ![]() Gabriel CheahPeace Acrylic, hand-made ceramic, European crystals 38 x 16 x 16 cm 2024 |
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![]() Gabriel CheahPeace II Acrylic, hand-mouldedmodeling clay, European crystals on canvas 183 x 91 cm 2024 | ![]() Gabriel RicoII from the series - Decorative premutations Cotton yarn on wooden board coated with beeswax 100 x 150 x 6 cm 2025 | ![]() Gabriel RicoII from the series - The open sets (The demand for organic unity of structure in the language) Cotton yarn on wooden board coated with beeswax 180 x 190 x 6 cm 2025 |
![]() Ni YouyuConstantin Brancusi Mix material on canvas 32.5 × 27.5 cm 2020 | ![]() Sun XunDevoured Memories Oil on bark paper and resin, mounted on wood panel 30 x 45 cm 2023 | ![]() Sun XunAll that Burns is Just the Speed of Time Oil on bark paper and resin, mounted on wood panel 30 x 45 cm 2023 |
![]() Zhang EnliCIGARETTE BOX Oil on canvas 40 x 30 cm 2002 | ![]() Zhang EnliThe Sink Oil on canvas 60 x 80 cm 2006 | ![]() Lin FangluShe's Pink Seducing Plant-dyed Cotton, Cotton thread, Wood 85 x 65 cm 2023 |
![]() Lin FangluShe's Yellow Body No.3 Plant-dyed Cotton, Cotton thread, Wood 92 x 72 x 10 cm 2023 | ![]() Geng Jianyi"Immersing" 23 About Immersing Time3 4 pages, thread-bound edition Watercolor on paper 25.2 x 32 x 0.6 cm 1999 | ![]() Li ShanEcho of Sumer 1 Acrylic on canvas 40 x 30 x 1.5 cm 2020 |
![]() Li ShanEcho of Sumer 3 Acrylic on canvas 46 x 61 x 1.5 cm 2020 | ![]() Ding YiAppearance of Crosses 92-B5 Mix media on paper 36 x 48 cm 1992 | ![]() Jigger CruzSacred Stain Oil on canvas 78 × 63 cm 2022 |
![]() Zhao ZhaoInsensitive Person Oil on canvas 37 × 25 cm 2019 | ![]() Zhao ZhaoUnrestrained Girl Oil on canvas 60 x 50 cm 2019 | ![]() Chen YujunRoom502No.171225 Acrylic on Canvas, the Old Boards 65 × 65 cm 2017 |
![]() Mao XuhuiGuishan: Cornstalk Stacks and Tobacco Drying Room Oil on canvas 60 × 80 cm 2010 | ![]() Michael ZelehoskiBlue Chair Repurposed wood with phenolic plywood 74 x 48 cm 2014 | ![]() Michael ZelehoskiKnot Reconfigured barricade and phenolic plywood 69 x 137 cm 2018 |
![]() Leng GuangminDivide Gold (The Gold Chair) Mixed media on canvas 35 × 25 cm 2023 | ![]() Is JumalonA CHANGING CLOUD 1 Oil on canvas 101.6 × 122cm 2025 | ![]() Is JumalonA CHANGING CLOUD 2 Oil on canvas 101.6 × 122cm 2025 |
![]() Is JumalonA CHANGING CLOUD 3 Oil on canvas 120 × 100cm 2025 | ![]() Is JumalonA CHANGING CLOUD 4 Oil on canvas 101.6 × 122cm 2025 |
Artists

Gabriel Cheah
b. 1998, Malaysia
Gabriel Cheah is a young artist who works primarily in Malaysia and the Southeast Asian region. He graduated from the Malaysian Institute of Art, Kuala Lumpur, in 2021. His work has received recognition in the art world, including being named in Prestige 40 under 40 (PRESTIGE
Malaysia, 2024) and The Z List 2023 (Lifestyle Asia, 2023).
Cheah’s solo exhibition includes CLICK Experience COLLAPSE in 3D (2024, Harta Space, curated by KolmeGlu). He has participated in numerous group exhibitions across Southeast Asia, including Unveiling South East Asia: Harmony In Diversity (2025, Lucie Chang Fine Arts, Hong Kong), MICROCOSM: Intimacies Beyond Distance (2025, Tang Contemporary Art), ArtMoments Jakarta 2025 (G13 Gallery, Indonesia), and 1000 Tiny Artworks 2025 (Hin Bus Depot, Penang).

Gabriel Rico
b. 1980, Jalisco, Mexico
Gabriel Rico describes himself as an “ontologist with a heuristic methodology.” He creates sculptures and installations by reworking found objects and materials—including neon, ceramics, taxidermy mounts, and tree branches—often combining natural and anti-natural forms. His work explores
the relationship between humans and the natural environment, emphasizing asymmetry, cultural reflection, and political critique. Rico studied architecture at ITESO in Guadalajara (2004) and has received awards and grants from institutions such as the Prince Claus Fund (2011),
FONCA/Colombian Ministry of Culture (2013), Ténot Fondation (2014), and ASU Art Museum & CALA Alliance (2017).
His work has been exhibited globally at venues such as the BeiQiu Museum of Contemporary Art, Nanjing (2022), Black Cube, Denver (2022), Institute of Contemporary Art, San Diego (2021), Perrotin galleries in New York, Paris, and Mexico City (2020–2021), Aspen Art Museum (2019), The Power Station, Dallas (2017), and Kunsthal Charlottenborg, Denmark (2016). Rico’s work was also included in the 58th Venice Biennale. His works are held in major public and institutional collections, including the Denver City Council, ASU Art Museum, Nasher Sculpture Center, High Museum of Art in Atlanta, North Carolina Museum of Art, Pérez Art Museum, Institute of Contemporary Art, Museum im Kulturspeicher (Germany), Gyeonggi Creation Center (Korea), Museo de Arte de Zapopan (Mexico), Plataforma de Arte Contemporáneo (Mexico), and the Korean Ceramic Foundation (KOCEF).

Ni Youyu
b. 1984, China
Ni Youyu is a contemporary artist whose practice has been widely exhibited both in China and internationally. His solo exhibitions include Beidou— Ni Youyu (2016, Contemporary Fine Arts, Berlin, Germany), Water Droplets Penetrate Stone (2015, Museum of Contemporary Art Taipei, Taiwan), Hidden Power (2015, Arario Gallery, Shanghai, China), An Inch of Time (2014, Art Museum of Nanjing University of the Arts, Nanjing, China), and A Brief History (2012, Shanghai Art Museum, Shanghai, China). He has also presented solo projects in Hong Kong and Beijing, including Inseparable (2013, Hive Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing) and Bubble (2013, 9㎡ Museum Project Space, German Consulate General, Shanghai).
Ni Youyu has participated in numerous group exhibitions across Asia, Europe, Australia, and the United States. Notable exhibitions include the 5th Singapore Biennale: Mirror Atlas(2016, Singapore Art Museum), Chinese Whispers (2016, Kunstmuseum Bern, Switzerland), Ink Remix: Contemporary Art
from Mainland China, Taiwan, and Hong Kong (2015–2016, Australia), Chinese Appropriation Art (2015, Power Station of Art, Shanghai), Out of the Line— New Art from China (2014, RHlContemporary Art, New York, USA), and Ctrl+N—Nonlinear Practice (2012, 9th Gwangju Biennale, Korea). His work is recognized for engaging contemporary Chinese art discourse while maintaining a global presence.

Sun Xun
b. 1980, Fuxin, Liaoning, China
Sun Xun is a Chinese contemporary artist and animator known for his experimental approach to printmaking, animation, and film. He graduated from the High School of China Academy of Art (2001) and the Printmaking Department of China Academy of Art, Hangzhou (2005). In 2006, he founded Pi Animation Studio in Hangzhou, relocating it to Beijing in 2009. His work often combines traditional and digital techniques to explore memory, history, and social narratives.
Sun Xun has received numerous awards, including the Guanlan International Print Biennial Honorary Work Award (2023), the Asia Society Future Arts Award (2018), and the CCAA Chinese Contemporary Art Award for Best Young Artist (2010). His solo exhibitions include The Magical Map of the Stars (2025, Guangdong Times Museum), The Vanishing Circus (2024, Tank Shanghai), and Tears of Chiwen (2023, Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts). He has participated in major group exhibitions globally, and his animated works have been featured in international film festivals such as Oberhausen, Annecy, and
Rotterdam. Sun Xun’s works are held in prominent collections worldwide, including the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (New York), Brooklyn Museum, M+ (Hong Kong), Vancouver Art Gallery, Deutsche Bank Collection (Germany), and White Rabbit Collection (Sydney, Australia).

Zhang Enli
b. 1965, Jilin Province, China
Zhang Enli is a Chinese contemporary artist known for hisdistinctive approach to painting that often explores the poetic and contemplative aspects of everyday objects and urban life. He graduated from the Wuxi Institute of Light Industry, Department of Fine Arts, in 1989. His solo exhibitions include
Zhang Enli: Expression and Zhang Enli: Portrait (2023), Moving Room: Zhang Enli at Power Station of Art, Shanghai (2020), and Birdcage, Temporary House: Zhang Enli at the Borghese Gallery (2019). His work has been shown internationally at venues such as HAUSER & WIRTH (Switzerland, USA, UK), Borghese Gallery (Italy), ICA (UK), and museums in Shanghai, Taipei, and New York.
Zhang has participated in major group exhibitions and biennales, including the Yokohama Triennale (2014) and Kochi-Muziris Biennale (2012), and exhibitions at the Centre Pompidou, Paris (2016), Shanghai Contemporary Art Museum, and UCCA Edge, Shanghai. His work is held in prominent public collections worldwide, including the West Bund Museum, Shanghai; Royal Academy of Arts, London; Borghese Gallery, Rome; K11 Art Foundation, Hong Kong; M+ Museum, Hong Kong; Long Museum, Shanghai; Rubell Family Collection, Miami; Tate Collection, London; Centre Pompidou, Paris; and Shanghai Art Museum.

Lin Fanglu
b. 1989, Liaoning Province, China
Born in 1989 in Liaoning Province, China, Lin Fanglu studied at the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing, where she received both her Bachelor of Arts in 2012 and her Master of Arts in 2016. During her undergraduate years, she also spent time abroad as an exchange student at Tokyo University of the Arts in Japan and Karlsruhe University of Art and Design in Germany, experiences that broadened her artistic vision and cross-cultural engagement.
Lin has held notable solo exhibitions including Threads of Change (2022, Art+ Gallery, Shanghai), She’s Body (2023, Art+ Shanghai Gallery/Suhe Haus, Shanghai), and The Power of Binding and Weaving (2023, Samgaksan Geumam Museum of Art, Seoul). Her works have been featured in major
international group exhibitions such as the LOEWE Foundation Craft Prize (2021, Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Paris), Material Tales (2021, London Design Museum/CAFA Art Museum), the
NGV Triennial (2023, Melbourne), and the Venice Design Biennial (2023). In 2021, she was awarded the Grand Prize of the LOEWE Foundation Craft Prize, and her works are now included in prestigious collections such as the Musée des Arts Décoratifs in Paris and the National Gallery of Victoria in
Melbourne.

Geng Jianyi
b. 1962, Henan Province, China
Geng Jianyi is a pioneering Chinese contemporary artist, known for his experimental and conceptual approach to painting, installation, and video art. He graduated from the Oil Painting Department of Zhejiang Academy of Fine Arts (now China Academy of Art) in 1985. Notable solo exhibitions include Who is He? Geng Jianyi Retrospective (2022–2023, Shanghai and Beijing), Ignorance, 1985–2008: Geng Jianyi's Works (2012, Shanghai), and Reading Apart from Words, Geng Jianyi's Solo Exhibition in New York (2006). His practice has also encompassed projects such as Helanshanfang Villa (2004, Yinchuan) and Stir-fried– A Video Curator’s Report from China (1997).
Geng has participated in significant group exhibitions, including Art and China after 1989: Theater of the World (2017, Guggenheim Museum, New York) and the Venice Biennale (1993, 1997, 2017). He has received multiple awards, such as the AAC Art China Annual Impact Award "Artist of the Year"
(2017) and the China Contemporary Art Award "Outstanding Achievement Award" (2012). His works are held in major collections, including the Art Institute of Chicago (USA), M+Museum (Hong Kong), Tate Collection (UK), Hammer Museum (USA), Uli Sigg Collection (Switzerland), and Marianne Brouwer
& Chris Driessen Fundament Foundation (Netherlands).

Li Shan
b. 1942, Heilongjiang, China
Li Shan is a prominent Chinese contemporary artist known for his bold, expressive painting style and contributions to modern Chinese art. He graduated from Heilongjiang University in 1963 and the Shanghai Theatre Academy in 1968. His notable solo exhibitions include Li Shan: Quantum Leap (2025, Sea World Culture and Arts Center, Shenzhen) and Li Shan: Sumerian Echo | Art Basel 2023 (2023, Basel, Switzerland).
Li Shan has also been featured in major group exhibitions such as Future and Art: AI, Robotics, City, Life– How Will Humans Live Tomorrow (2019, Mori Art Museum, Tokyo) and Art and China After 1989: Theater of the World (2017, Guggenheim Museum, New York). He participated in the 45th Venice
International Art Biennale (1993). His works are held in prominent collections, including the Star Museum, Shanghai; M+ Museum, Hong Kong; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, USA; and the Uli Sigg Collection, Switzerland.

Ding Yi
b. 1962, Shanghai, China
Ding Yi is a prominent contemporary Chinese artist known for his abstract explorations and long-standing Appearance of Crosses series. He graduated from Shanghai School of Arts and Crafts in 1983 and the Fine Arts College of Shanghai University in 1990, later teaching at the Shanghai Institute of Visual Arts from 2005 to 2015. Ding Yi has received international recognition, including a scholarship from Stiftung Kunstfonds, Germany, in 2001. His major solo exhibitions include Ding Yi:
The Winding Path (2025, Kunming), Portent and Reflection (2024, Provence, France), Crux Galaxy (2023, Shenzhen), Flowing Infinity (2022, Qingdao), and landmark exhibitions of his Appearance of Crosses series in Berlin, Bologna, Paris, andShanghai between 1994 and 2018.
In addition to his solo practice, Ding Yi has participated in numerous significant group exhibitions globally. Recent highlights include Realm of Dunhuang (2024, Shanghai), Gravity of Time—2023 Chengdu Biennale (2023, Chengdu), Art and China after 1989: Theater of the World (2017, New York,
USA), Forever Abstract (2016, Beijing), and Avant-Garde China: Twenty Years of Chinese Contemporary Art (2008, Japan). His works have been featured in key exhibitions across Europe,
North America, and Asia, reflecting his influential role in contemporary abstract painting and his ongoing contribution to the development of Chinese modern art.

JIGGER CRUZ
b. 1984, Malabon City, Manila, Philippines
Jigger Cruz is a contemporary Filipino artist recognized for his bold, highly textured paintings that merge figuration with abstraction. He graduated with a BFA from Far Eastern University in Manila. His solo exhibitions include Paradigmal Traps (2021) at Tang Contemporary Art, Bangkok, In the Landscape of Narratives and False Monuments (2021) at Artinformal Gallery, Manila, Picture Towards the Other Side (2018) at Albertz Benda, New York, and Subtraction Paradise (2015) at ARNDT, Singapore.
Cruz has also participated in numerous group exhibitions, such as A New Sense of Identity (2022) at Tang Contemporary Art, Hong Kong, Falling (2021) at Tang Contemporary Art, Beijing, Abstract vs. Optic (2020) at Primo Marella Gallery, Milan, and WASAK! (2015) at ARNDT, Berlin, showcasing his dynamic engagement with contemporary painting on an international scale.

ZHAO ZHAO
b. 1982, Xinjiang, China
Zhao Zhao is known for his multidisciplinary practice spanning sculpture, installation, and painting, often exploring social phenomena, memory, and human experience through conceptual interventions. He graduated with a BFA in Oil Painting from the Xinjiang Institute of Arts (2003) and has since developed a prolific international career, presenting solo exhibitions in major institutions such as Long Museum, Chongqing (2024), Tang Contemporary Art, Beijing and Hong Kong (2023–2021), Macao Museum of Art (2022), and Chambers Fine Art, New York (2015, 2013). Zhao Zhao’s work
frequently engages with performative gestures and immersive installations that provoke reflection on contemporary life.
His projects have been featured in prestigious group exhibitions worldwide, including Art Basel Hong Kong, Art Genève, Frieze New York, Sydney Biennale, and MAXXI Museum, Rome. He has also participated in thematic exhibitions at MoMA, New York, Orange County Museum of Art, and the Pinchuk Art Centre, among others. Zhao Zhao’s practice is recognized for its critical engagement with societal structures and human behaviors, positioning him as one of the leading voices in contemporary Chinese art with a strong presence across Asia, Europe, and North America.

Chen Yujun
b. 1976, Fujian, China
Chen Yujun is a contemporary Chinese artist whose practice centers on painting and multimedia projects that explore memory, urban transformation, and human experience. He graduated with a BA from the China Academy of Art in 1999 and has since held numerous solo exhibitions, including “Chen Yujun” at Tang Contemporary Art, Beijing (2019), “REFLECTION FROM THE GOLDEN DOME” at Rén Space, Shanghai (2018), and “Mulan River– Voyage” at Asia Art Center, Taipei (2018).
Chen’s works have been featured in prominent group exhibitions globally, such as the Sydney Biennale (2014), Venice Arsenale (2013), Ullens Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing, and multiple exhibitions across Shanghai, Beijing, and international venues including Paris, Berlin, and Brussels. His
art is included in major collections, such as the Brooklyn Museum (New York), White Rabbit Contemporary Chinese Art Collection (Sydney), M+ Museum of Art (Hong Kong), Yuz Museum (Shanghai), Long Museum (Shanghai), and He Xiangning Art Museum (Shenzhen), highlighting his significant contribution to contemporary Chinese painting and cross-regional artistic discourse.

Mao Xuhui
b. 1956, Chongqing, China
Mao Xuhui is a seminal figure in contemporary Chinese art and a leading representative of the Southwestern art community. After graduating from the Yunnan Arts University in 1982 with a degree in oil painting, he served as a professor at the School of Art and Design, Yunnan University (2001–2016). Mao played a pivotal role in the formation of the “Southwest Art Research Group” (1985–1989), which united young artists from Yunnan and Sichuan under the banner of “New Figurative” painting.
This movement, emphasizing the vitality and cultural identity of Southwest China, became a key component of China’s avant-garde‘85 New Wave art movement and established Mao’s enduring influence in the history of contemporary Chinese art.
Mao Xuhui’s work has been exhibited in nearly 200 solo and group exhibitions worldwide. Notable recent solo exhibitions include “Eternal History: Mao Xuhui 1980–2021” at Tang Contemporary Art, Beijing (2021), “Will: Mao Xuhui” in Hong Kong (2020), and “Deep Reading: Mao Xuhui Documentary
Exhibition” in Wuhan (2019). His work has also been included in major international exhibitions such as the 55th Venice Biennale (2013), Busan Biennale (2016), and numerous landmark retrospectives of contemporary Chinese art.

Michael Zelehoski
b. 1979, Concord, MA, USA
Michael Zelehoski is an American artist who lives and works in Newburgh and Brooklyn, New York. He received his Associates of Art degree from Bard College at Simon’s Rock and a BA from the Universidad Finis Terrae, in Santiago, Chile. Michael Zelehoski’s return to the United States after six years in South America. Zelehoski's work involves the literal collapse of three-dimensional objects, and he re-defines the material character into two-dimensional space
Zelehoski has exhibited nationally and internationally, with works residing in private and public collections around the world, most notably in the Musée National d’Art- Centre Pompidou in
Paris, which acquired his 40 ft. monumental piece Open House in the Spring of 2015. Recent solo exhibitions include: All of This and Nothing - Michael Zelehoski, Art Museum of Guangzhou Academy of Fine Arts, Guangzhou, China (2020); All of This and Nothing, Tang Contemporary Art, Beijing, China
(2020); Untitled, Miami Beach, Florida, USA (2018); Things Fall Apart, Backslash, Paris, France (2018); Inner Space, Tang Contemporary, Hong Kong (2017) and New Order, Mike Weiss Gallery, New York, USA (2015). In March 2019, he installed a major work “The Rapture” in the center of Times Square in
New York city.

LENG GUANGMIN
b.1986, Qingzhou, Shandong, China
Leng Guangmin is a contemporary Chinese artist whose practice explores the human figure through nuanced painting and sculptural approaches. He graduated with a B.F.A (2009) and M.F.A (2012) from the Oil Painting Department of Tianjin Academy of Fine Arts. His solo exhibitions include Leng
Guangmin: Figure Wound (Tang Contemporary Art, Beijing, 2024), Leng Guangmin: Shell, like the wings of a cicada (MAHO KUBOTA GALLERY, Tokyo, 2023), and Shells Garner Lingering
Light (Tang Contemporary Art, Hong Kong, 2023).
Leng’s work has also been featured in major group exhibitions such as Ritual, Trauma, and Allegory (Tang Contemporary Art, Hong Kong, 2025), Art Basel Hong Kong (Tang Contemporary Art, 2025), and Ambiguous Yesterday (Tang Contemporary Art,
Singapore, 2024). He has received multiple awards including the First Prize of the Artron Poly New Power Nominees Exhibition (2014), the Luo Zhongli Scholarship (2012), and the Grand Prize of the Winsor Newton Arts Scholarship (2009). His works are held in prestigious collections including the Gallery of TAFA, He Xiangning Art Museum, Yuz Museum Shanghai, and the White Rabbit Collection.

Is Jumalon
b.1996, Philippines
Is Jumalon is a visual artist whose drawing and painting explore the connection between self and the observed world. Her work delves into overlooked peripheries, delicate provocations, and nuanced metaphors that challenge perception and interpretation. Working across acrylic, oil, charcoal, and pastel, she skillfully manipulates subtle shifts in form and meaning. A graduate of Fine Arts from the University of the Philippines Diliman, she currently lives in Manila. Through her practice, Jumalon investigates diverse forms and dimensions, creating imagery that invites reflection on the boundaries between what is seen and what is felt.
































