Tang Art Contemporary is pleased to announce the opening of the group exhibition “Light in the Whirlpool” on June 14 at 4 p.m. at its Headquarters Space in Beijing. Curated by Fiona Lu and Wang Shiying, the exhibition features the latest works by artists Guo Longyao, Liu Wen, Mark Yang, Rao Weiyi, Wang Xiao, Wu Yumo, Xu Haoyang, Zhang Bin, and Zhang Kaitong.
In the concept of infinite time in The Book of Sand, "If space is infinite, we may be at any point in space. If time is infinite, we may be at any point in time." — Jorge Luis Borges, we constantly attempt to define the fluid reality of the process with rigid logic. In the ceaseless river of time, every small whirlpool formed by a pause has its own unique trajectory, varying in speed, rhythm, and flow—ever-moving, constantly changing, sometimes disappearing in a twist or rushing forth, eventually becoming a wave sweeping into the sea.
At the deeper levels of the hidden order, the past, present, and future are not fragmented moments, but rather coexisting potential states, just as the entire river exists simultaneously within its riverbed. David Bohm uses the dynamic processes of "Enfoldment" and "Unfoldment" to describe the flow of all things: the whirlpool that manifests in the present (the explicit order) contains information and potential that had already been folded in the river of the hidden order. The passing of this moment is not annihilation but a re-enfolding back into the matrix containing all possibilities. The finite nature of individual life is like a page in The Book of Sand that can never be fully exhausted, but will ultimately be turned over; the infinity of the hidden order, on the other hand, is the holographic book that encompasses all pages, all stories, and all possible endings.
The whirlpool may vanish in an instant, just as light, through dynamic realization, allows color to appear. In the brief moment of the whirlpool's motion, a potential form begins to manifest, becoming one possibility in all things. In the endless flow containing the past, present, and future, the swirling thoughts and the boundaries of reality become intertwined, inseparable.
In this exhibition, the artists immerse themselves in the flow of the "hidden order", and the exhibition space itself becomes a vast "enfoldment" field, integrating manifested light into the new network of the hidden order. In Rao Weiyi’s works, the accidental collisions on the screen are skillfully "enfolded" into the deep textures of the canvas, representing the process of intuitively melding perception into a unified whole. His creative path does not progress linearly but flows like information in the hidden order: vague ideas gradually "unfold" as the painting progresses, with the clear contours of screen images dissipating, transforming into multi-dimensional "space-time folds" and ultimately crystallizing into the form of the artwork on the canvas. In Wang Xiao’s works, the human figures and landscape elements merge into an intangible spiritual current, floating between past and future, searching for belonging. On the canvas, the both concrete and transcendental figures form a unique spiritual landscape within the network of hidden order, containing reflections on individual fate and regional imprints.
Liu Wen’s mixed-media installations anchor the textures of old objects in a specific moment, and through the process of re-creating these objects, they embody deep life experiences and products shaped by "loss" in an individual’s history—enfolded within the materiality of the works. This choice itself is a manifestation of the emotional and memory-related aspects hidden in the hidden order, bringing them into the realm of concrete dialogue. Wu Yumo’s series of photographs transforms truth into a multiple exposure "whirlpool" that shifts reality. The artist returns the camera to the “light” of the human eye, capturing the ambiguity of time between reality and mental imagery. Both Guo Longyao and Xu Haoyang’s works freeze memory and life’s traces in a single moment, suspending the flowing memories and marks of life within the linear sequence of time, transforming them into emotional fragments that touch upon the silent, solid temporality underlying the world of life.
Mark Yang’s works, under the gaze of art history, create a dialogue between "the past" and "the present" through geometric deconstruction. The headless body, with its sculptural legs overlapping, dissolves the boundaries of the individual, and when the viewer’s gaze meets the geometric variations in the image, a subtle dialectic of presence and absence quietly emerges. Zhang Kaitong presents the sensory qualities of the post-network era through the "glitches" in images—fleeting or eternal, straight or distorted visual screen textures. Zhang Bin, through the retro materiality of her work, observes the passing of time with calm precision, measuring the thickness of the traces left in the flow of life with a near-scientific rigor.
In the convergence and divergence of moments, the value of a fleeting whirlpool lies precisely in existence itself. Each whirlpool is like a page in The Book of Sand that cannot be repeated. The artists, in their own ways, become "light catchers"—when thoughts touch reality, the whirlpool of thought is illuminated by "light" and activated, allowing the potential form to manifest among all things. The unfolding of the hidden order, containing the light of consciousness, stirs small whirlpools—brief though they may be, they reflect, just before dissolving, the infinite source of light that contains all possibilities of the past, present, and future.
EXHIBITING WORKS
Artists

Guo Longyao
b.1989 in Gansu, graduated in 2013 from the Oil Painting Department of Sichuan Conservatory of Music, Chengdu Academy of Fine Arts. He currently works and lives in Beijing.
Guo Longyao's works are like empty frames of images from his rural upbringing. He places the main figures outside the frame, allowing both the audience and the artist to stand together, becoming one. Together, they observe and feel the scene that originally belonged to their own life. These scenes, which mix multiple roles, collective memories, and imagination, blur and even lose the specific details that change with different people or times. The soft light in his works preserves the characters' long, steady breath, while the bright spaces accumulate their calm and clear gaze. This creates a certain spirit of resilience, eternity, purity, beauty, and freedom, unshaken and unaffected by the harsh realities of the present or past.
Guo Longyao's major solo and group exhibitions include: "Flowers" at MGspace, Beijing (2024), "Butter, Coffee, Steamed Buns" at A26 Space, Beijing (2022), "White Phoenix" at Shekou Gallery, Shenzhen (2022), "Cuntusi" at Shanghanu Gallery M50, Shanghai (2021), Group Exhibitions: 4th China Xinjiang International Art Biennale, Xinjiang Art Museum (2024), "Suspended Time" at Yishijian, Nanjing (2024), "A Tree, A Road" at Danqiu, Beijing (2023), "Seeking the Town" at Datong Contemporary Art Season, Shanxi (2023), "Spacetime Configuration - Contemporary Reinterpretation of Historical and Cultural Elements" at Yinchuan Contemporary Art Museum, Yinchuan (2022), "Meet•Prevision" Collectors' Recommendation Exhibition at Bo Le De Art Center, Beijing (2022), "Apartment Works - A Precursor to the Agricultural Exhibition Hall" at Beijing (2022), "Room Covered in Moss" at Jinge Art Center, Beijing, "Take the Black Bridge" at Black Bridge Space, Beijing (2017), "Warm Room" at Black Bridge Erdao 8, Beijing (2016), "Amazing Room" in Amazing Room, Beijing (2015), "Oh My God!" Art Project ACTION Space, Beijing (2014), "Your World" 2nd Contemporary Art WEIDO Exhibition at Songzhuang Art Museum, Beijing (2013), and "Night Walk at Black Bridge" Art Project We Say We Need Space So We Have Space, Beijing (2013).

Wen Liu
Wen Liu is a visual artist born in Shanghai, China, and based in Brooklyn, New York. Her work investigates the emotional architecture of migration, memory, and belonging - using sculpture, installation, and mixed media to explore the tension between permanence and impermanence. Drawing from personal and cultural experiences as an immigrant, she reflects on what it means to build a sense of security in unfamiliar environments, confronting the overlap of public recollection and private memory.
Liu is a 2025 MacDowell Fellow and a 2022 grantee of the Roswell Artist-in-Residence Foundation. She has received multiple awards from the City of Chicago’s Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events (DCASE) and was awarded the Illinois Arts Council 2020 Artist Fellowship. Her past residencies include MASS MoCA, Vermont Studio Center, ACRE Projects, and Hyde Park Art Center.
Her work has been exhibited nationally and internationally at institutions such as The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum (CT), Roswell Museum (NM), Lubeznik Center for the Arts (IN), the Chicago Cultural Center, and the National Grand Theater in Beijing. Through nuanced material exploration and deeply personal inquiries, Liu creates poetic and spatially resonant works that question what endures and what fades.

Mark Yang
b. 1994, Seoul, South Korea, lives and works in Yonkers, New York
Korean-American artist Mark Yang employs portrayals of male intimacy in his paintings of intertwined nudes to analyze his identity as an immigrant and contrast masculinity ideals in the United States and Korea. Yang’s larger-than-life naked figures, usually Asian men, grapple and embrace openly. Yang contextualizes his work within an art historical lineage that dates back to ancient Greece by focusing on masculine nudity. He highlights the formal features of his intricate compositions by outlining the shapes of his intertwined figures with solid lines of contrasting color.
Received a B.F.A from Art Center College of Design and an M.F.A. from Columbia University, New York. Yang has held solo exhibitions at MASSIMODECARLO, Paris and Beijing; Kasmin, New York; Various Small Fires, Los Angeles, Texas, and Seoul, among others. The artist has been in group exhibitions at Ogunquit Museum of American Art, Oguinquit, ME; K11, Shanghai, CN, Kasmin, New York; Perrotin, Paris; Spurs Gallery, Beijing, among others. His work is included in the public collection of the Dallas Museum of Art; the Mint Museum, Charlotte; the High Museum of Art, Atlanta; the Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami, Rubell Museum, Miami, and X Museum, Beijing.

Rao Weiyi
b. 1993,in Hunan Province,China. Graduated from the Oil Painting Department of Sichuan Fine Arts Institute in 2016 with a Bachelor's degree, and graduated from the Oil Painting Department of Sichuan Fine Arts Institute with a Master's degree in 2020. Rao is one of the representative emerging artists of the younger generation, and his awards include: the Porsche Research Scholarship (2020), the Silver Award of the 3rd Powerlong Art Award (2020), The Gift Nomination Award of the School of Fine Arts of Sichuan Fine Arts Institute (2020), the 10th New Star Art Award TOP100 (2019) etc.. Rao has made cyberculture and social ecology his permanent issue, transforms the unique texture of network images into experimental painting language, and embodies certain apprehensive and constrained emotional characteristics of the present through fictional or hypertextual narratives from his personal perspective. His images are often tinged with surreal scenarios, but they are presented in a matter-of-fact, undramatic way, like an unfolding monologue, which has no persuasive power, but allows one to empathize and be in the moment.

Wang Xiao
b.1990 in Beijing, currently resides in New York. His works primarily focus on realistic oil painting. He uses photographs as source material to create fictional scenes, combining exaggerated lighting, colors, and rigorous realistic techniques. Wang Xiao’s paintings draw inspiration from everyday scenes such as still life, interior spaces, and landscapes. When it comes to figures, he insists on portraying his close friends and family, often using himself as a model. These materials ground the content of his works in the real world.
In terms of style, Wang Xiao pursues a bizarre atmosphere and intense emotion. He typically uses unnatural lighting and colors to create dreamlike yet surreal scenarios, where the figures in his paintings merge with the scene, immersed in a dreamlike state. His recent works often include numerous symbolic elements to guide the interpretation of the painting. Wang Xiao’s works capture the complex emotions of confusion and contradiction in contemporary life, while also reflecting a yearning for inner peace and a pursuit of spiritual connection between people.

Yumo Wu
b.1995 , in Inner Mongolia, China, currently resides and works in Beijing, China, and Düsseldorf, Germany. She holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Photography from the Rhode Island School of Design (2021, with Honors) and a Master of Arts in Photography from the École cantonale d'art de Lausanne (ECAL) in Switzerland (2023, with Mention Excellent). As an artist dedicated to photography, the camera becomes a living extension of Wu’s own body—its sensory faculties constantly interfacing with the vision of her naked eye. She disrupts the traditional logic of photographic techniques, allowing perception to become a method in itself. Through this, those elusive, trembling, and subtly glitching moments of reality are precisely captured, and reconstructed into a new reality that strays from the familiar world.
Her works have been exhibited in recent years at major international venues, including the Foto/Industria Biennale in Bologna, Italy, the Yicang Art Museum in Shanghai, China, the Platform-L Contemporary Art Center in Seoul, South Korea, the Three Shadows Photography Art Center in China, the 3331 Arts Chiyoda Art Center in Tokyo, Japan, the International Photography Festival in Rotterdam, Netherlands, the International Photography Festival in Padua, Italy, the International Photography Festival in Lithuania, the Northern Lights International Photography Festival in the Netherlands, The ShopHouse Gallery in Hong Kong, Mijin Gallery in Shanghai, Culterim Gallery in Berlin, ImaginaryZ Space in Hangzhou, and 46 Space in London.

Xu Haoyang
b.1998,in Yantai, China.Graduated from the Oil Painting Department of the Central Academy of Fine Arts in 2020 with a bachelor's degree. Graduated from the Oil Painting Department of the Central Academy of Fine Arts in 2023 with a master's degree.
Xu Haoyang's paintings are like condensed fragments of images, capturing and revealing the gray areas of human nature and emotion. They involve contemplation on the ambiguous relationships between people, events, and objects, presenting a scene that is both grounded in reality and detached from it. This static condensation gradually becomes fluid as it is observed, with the colors in the painting—simultaneously real and surreal—giving rise to a tension beneath restraint: what it touches is always the dark yet tender core of human consciousness.

Zhang Bin
The hazy and misty visual effects in Zhang Bin's paintings come from the artist's skillful use of tempera techniques. Tempera is used by artists to depict ordinary daily life, which is often invisible to us. Most of them are sealed in the most private memories, but the artist calmly and bravely reveals them in public. In this way, she not only gives a heavy texture to the current daily life and parts of the body, but also allows a certain sense of history and sociality to land softly in a tranquil mood.
Zhang Bin's paintings display a distinctive personal style both in terms of form and the use of tempera mixed techniques. His works are finely detailed and vivid, with a subtle emotional depth. They embody a unique blend of Eastern charm and the essence and spirit of Western classical painting. His artworks have been collected by various institutions, art galleries, and private collectors both domestically and internationally.

Zhang Kaitong
Zhang Kaitong graduated from North China University of Science and Technology in 2014 and later studied at the Kassel Academy of Art under the guidance of artists Andrea Büttner and Dierk Schmidt, graduating with a master’s degree in 2024. Zhang Kaitong has lived between the cities of Berlin, Athens and Beijing, for an extended period, blurring the boundaries of his perception of many things. Throughout his creative process, he maintains a disciplined habit of reading and observing, such as visiting galleries according to the progression of cultural history. This lasting habit has shaped his inclination towards analytical creation, focusing more on the meaning and discussion behind the form. Additionally, he struggled with mental illness for a period, which gradually led his creative direction towards visual explorations of multiculturalism, ancient art, Eastern philosophy, and psychology.