“What we observe is not nature itself, but nature exposed to our method of questioning”
- Werner Heisenberg
Structural Inquiry - The Mechanics of the Everyday
Art should operate as inquiry. The exhibition focuses on structures that govern everyday perception: bodily habit, the distinction between natural and artificial production, the authority of visual information, and the persistence of institutional systems. Rather than themes, they are operational conditions that shape how reality is organised and understood
Through deliberate reconfiguration- altering gesture, fabricating organic form in industrial matter, restructuring diagrammatic language, and recomposing established orders - the artists demonstrate that these conditions are neither neutral nor inevitable. They are built, maintained, and repeated
Epigram in E - Method and Modulation
Material, scale, composition, and presentation are therefore integral to the argument. They are not aesthetic afterthoughts but analytical tools. Form itself serves as a demonstration. Each work tests how meaning is produced and how authority is secured
An epigram is concise. It does not narrate; it proposes. It distils thought into a form that refuses excess. In this exhibition, the artworks operate as concentrated propositions, exposing how structures function and how they acquire authority. E Major carries four sharps. It signifies a deliberate re-tuning. That subtle elevation recalibrates the entire field of sound. Minor deviation alters perception. Epigram in E presents the artists’ calibrated examinations of how order holds and how it can be shifted. Precise in argument, calibrated in method, refined in presentation
The exhibition proposes that understanding structure is a practical necessity. Systems endure through repetition and acceptance. When their construction becomes visible, inevitability weakens. These works introduce precise deviations that reveal the assumptions holding coherence together. Recognition precedes change. That awareness expands agency
“I would rather have questions that can’t be answered than answers that can’t be questioned”
- Richard Feynman
Curator: Pandora Wang, Biyao Yu
