Huang Yan

Huang Yan
China

PhD, Artist. The associate professor, academic advisor, and head of Department of Fiber Art at China Academy of Art.

Huang Yan’s works take forms in easel art and spatial installations, often involving various media such as images and lighting. Her recent research has been focusing on visualization in digital weaving and digital fiber art.

Her works have been shown frequently both at home and abroad, including National Art Museum of China, He Xiangning Art Museum, Guan Shan Yue Art Gallery, Today Art Museum, Luo Zhongli Art Museum, as well as art fairs such as ART 021, Art Taipei, Art Shenzhen, and other international exhibitions. The awards she has received include China’s National Exhibition of Fine Arts, Provincial Exhibition of Fine Arts, Provincial Youth Art Exhibition, Luo Zhongli Award, etc. Her works have been selected into the collection by Hangzhou People’s Government, Nanjing People’s Government, Guan Shan Yue Art Gallery, Ningbo Museum of Art, Art Shenzhen, as well as collectors from France and Taiwan, China.

In the Blink of an Eye
Silk thread, painted board, LED lights, regulating transformer,eletric wires,video projection 
1700 × 220 × 300 cm
2022

French philosopher Gaston Bachelard once called the imagined geographical space “poetic space,” for he thinks its imagination of it is more important than its objective existence. Such a fictional body of space might be conceived as a timeless space with a self-sufficient confined system, just like a “transparent stone”—a model detached from the concept of time.
Enabling the sense of vision wandering in a space without a perception point, this kind of space may gift us the possibility of breaking loose from the limitation of reality, space, and time. In this sense, our minds can extend infinitely “in the blink of an eye”.
Our visual perception could be reconstructed by detaching from the usual perception points in reality.

In the Blink of an Eye
Silk thread, painted board, LED lights, regulating transformer,eletric wires,video projection 
1700 × 220 × 300 cm 
2022

French philosopher Gaston Bachelard once called the imagined geographical space “poetic space,” for he thinks its imagination of it is more important than its objective existence. Such a fictional body of space might be conceived as a timeless space with a self-sufficient confined system, just like a “transparent stone”—a model detached from the concept of time.
Enabling the sense of vision wandering in a space without a perception point, this kind of space may gift us the possibility of breaking loose from the limitation of reality, space, and time. In this sense, our minds can extend infinitely “in the blink of an eye”.
Our visual perception could be reconstructed by detaching from the usual perception points in reality.

In the Blink of an Eye
Silk thread, painted board, LED lights, regulating transformer,eletric wires,video projection 
1700 × 220 × 300 cm 
2022

French philosopher Gaston Bachelard once called the imagined geographical space “poetic space,” for he thinks its imagination of it is more important than its objective existence. Such a fictional body of space might be conceived as a timeless space with a self-sufficient confined system, just like a “transparent stone”—a model detached from the concept of time.
Enabling the sense of vision wandering in a space without a perception point, this kind of space may gift us the possibility of breaking loose from the limitation of reality, space, and time. In this sense, our minds can extend infinitely “in the blink of an eye”.
Our visual perception could be reconstructed by detaching from the usual perception points in reality.

In the Blink of an Eye
Silk thread, painted board, LED lights, regulating transformer,eletric wires,video projection 
1700 × 220 × 300 cm 
2022

French philosopher Gaston Bachelard once called the imagined geographical space “poetic space,” for he thinks its imagination of it is more important than its objective existence. Such a fictional body of space might be conceived as a timeless space with a self-sufficient confined system, just like a “transparent stone”—a model detached from the concept of time.
Enabling the sense of vision wandering in a space without a perception point, this kind of space may gift us the possibility of breaking loose from the limitation of reality, space, and time. In this sense, our minds can extend infinitely “in the blink of an eye”.
Our visual perception could be reconstructed by detaching from the usual perception points in reality.

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