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SOLO EXHIBITION

Ming Ying

Anonymous Monuments

Hong Kong Central Space

2025.11.15 - 2025.12.15

Press

Tang Contemporary is proud to present Ming Ying’s solo exhibition "Anonymous Monuments" at Tang Contemporary Art Hong Kong, Central space on November 15, 2025. The exhibition, curated by Yonni Park and Jeeeun Hong, features 18 remarkable paintings by the artist and will remain on view until December 15.

 

Ming Ying’s exhibition "Anonymous Monuments" invites us into a world where the female figure emerges not as a singular identity but as a living fabric of history, culture, and emotion. Her paintings, executed in heavy impasto oil, are less about representation and more about embodiment: each layered brushstroke is a visceral act of storytelling, transforming paint into a tactile memory. Within this process, she reconfigures how we perceive female identity—shifting it from personal portraiture to a universal monument.

 

The "monuments" in her work are not statues of leaders or historical markers inscribed with names. They are anonymous, faceless figures, simultaneously present and elusive, whose forms gesture toward stories beyond the individual. By erasing facial identity, she resists the specificity of portraiture and instead opens a space where cultural signifiers—clothing, posture, gesture—carry the weight of narrative. This anonymity liberates the viewer to enter the scene, to project one’s own interpretations and emotions, and to recognize the ways in which identity is both constructed and dissolved across history.

 

Her figures draw from different cultural backgrounds and historical periods, reimagined through dreamlike, often psychedelic atmospheres. These faceless women embody contrasts: rebellion and quiet persistence, fragility and strength, longing and resilience. In their anonymity, they become collective symbols—echoes of countless women who, across time and place, have shaped histories often left unrecorded. Ming Ying’s "Anonymous Monuments" thus reclaims absence as a form of presence, where what is withheld speaks as powerfully as what is revealed.

 

The materiality of her practice is central to this transformation. The heavy impasto is more than a technique—it is a philosophy of embodiment. Thick, swirling strokes form restless backgrounds that envelop the figures, dissolving the boundary between subject and environment. This layering creates both physical and emotional depth, mirroring the layered complexity of womanhood itself. The tactile quality of the surface reminds us that painting is not only to be seen but to be felt; the viewer’s eye becomes a hand tracing the grooves of history and emotion embedded in pigment.

 

In this sense, her work resonates deeply with the phenomenology of Maurice Merleau-Ponty, who emphasized that perception is not a detached act of the intellect but an embodied encounter with the world. For Merleau-Ponty, the body is not separate from the world but entwined with it, a fabric through which meaning is woven. She translates this philosophy into visual form: the female body becomes the ultimate "flesh" upon which cultural narratives are inscribed. Through her paintings, the body is revealed not as an isolated entity but as a site of interconnection—between past and present, personal and collective, material and symbolic.

 

The facelessness of her figures also opens a psychological dimension. Without features, their emotions are not fixed but fluid, dependent on the viewer’s projection. This ambiguity transforms the act of viewing into a dialogue: the painting does not dictate meaning but invites the viewer to complete it. Here, anonymity is not absence but multiplicity—each figure can embody countless lives, countless memories, countless emotions. Visually, Ming Ying’s paintings oscillate between figuration and abstraction, creating an in-between space where the boundaries of identity blur. The swirling, agitated grounds suggest both opulence and instability, situating her subjects within environments that are as much psychological landscapes as physical ones. This liminality captures the dual nature of womanhood as she conceives it: resilient yet vulnerable, intimate yet monumental, particular yet universal.

The title "Anonymous Monuments" encapsulates this duality. A monument, by definition, commemorates significance—yet her monuments refuse to be tied to a single figure or narrative. They are anonymous not because they lack importance but because they embody the collective, the multitude of unnamed women whose lives and struggles are rarely monumentalized in history. By rendering them faceless yet monumental, she gestures toward a reimagined history where memory is not bound to the celebrated individual but to shared experience.

 

This exhibition, then, is not only about representation but about recognition. It asks: what does it mean to remember collectively rather than individually? What histories become possible when we shift attention from the heroic figure to the anonymous body? And how might art create new monuments—not of stone or marble, but of pigment and perception—that honor resilience, emotion, and interconnectedness?

 

Ultimately, Ming Ying’s "Anonymous Monuments" transforms painting into a site of encounter. The tactile materiality of impasto, the faceless yet evocative figures, the cultural references woven into form and color—all coalesce into works that both command attention and invite reflection. They remind us that identity is never singular, that history is always layered, and that the body—anonymous yet monumental—remains the most enduring fabric upon which our collective narratives are inscribed.

 

Through these paintings, she builds monuments not to the already remembered but to those who remain unseen. In their anonymity, these figures achieve a universality that transcends time and culture, offering a poignant meditation on strength, vulnerability, and the shared human condition. Her work asks us not only to witness but to participate, to bring our own memories into dialogue with hers, and to recognize in these faceless figures fragments of ourselves.

EXHIBITING WORKS

Works
Artist
Artist
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Ming Ying

b. 1995, Beijing, China

Lives and works in London, UK

 

Ming Ying is known for her vivid and semi-abstract paintings of groups and individuals within domestic and public settings. As a London-based artist who was born in Beijing, China. Ming reflects the predominance of Western cultures, whilst also conveying the social phenomena of detachment, bewilderment, and aspiration that arise out of the process of Western integration for those from different cultural backgrounds.

 

In recent years her work has been awarded and shortlisted for a number of prestigious prizes including First prize of “Effect Edge” International Juried Exhibition (2019); Winner of the Khojaly Peace Prize for Art (2017); Chadwell Award (2020) Lynn Painter-Stainer Prize (2018); Ashurst Emerging artist prize (2018).

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