Hong Wai 洪慧: Lace Calligraphy Landscape Sculpture Waterfall (瀑 – 蕾絲書法山水裝置)
Floating Islands
In Lace Calligraphy Landscape—Floating Islands, the artist orchestrates a compelling negotiation between the inherited gravitas of Chinese calligraphy and the tactile intimacy of lace, situating the work at the confluence of tradition and contemporary materiality. This installation, conceived site-specifically for Volta Basel’s Public Sculpture Sector, deftly reimagines the calligraphic gesture as a spatial event—one that oscillates between the corporeal and the ephemeral.
The act of folding lace into calligraphic forms is not merely a technical intervention, but a conceptual re-inscription of language into landscape. The resultant topographies—mountainous yet diaphanous—invite the viewer to traverse both surface and depth, revealing hidden textualities embedded within the undulations of fabric. In this way, the work enacts a kind of slow reading, where meaning is not immediately apprehended but emerges through embodied encounter.
Ultimately, Lace Calligraphy Landscape—Floating Island offers viewers a space of poetic suspension—a terrain where calligraphy, landscape, and light converge, inviting each participant to locate their own sense of agency and wonder within the floating, ever-shifting islands of meaning.
Waterfall – Lace Calligraphy Landscape Sculpture (瀑 – 蕾絲書法山水裝置)
Hong Wai's floatings islands, lace calligraphy landscape sculpture 'Waterfall' (瀑 - buk), is a critical piece in the evolving “One Life, One Dream” series, marking a conceptual shift from interviewing Asian immigrants in Paris to focusing on the experiences of Western immigrants in Hong Kong. Curated by Luke Chapman, the work features the Chinese character for 'waterfall' pleated directly into hardened, suspended lace. This lace calligraphy technique transforms the delicate material into a robust, three-dimensional form that simultaneously acts as a textile sculpture and a calligraphic representation. The character 瀑 (buk) symbolizes the immigrant journey's powerful and turbulent flow—the decisive break from the past and the subsequent complex process of integration and self-redefinition in a new environment.
The sculpture is physically manifested as a 'floating island,' a poignant metaphor for a life displaced and unmoored. The use of lace, a material with Western connotations, in conjunction with the Chinese character, speaks to the fusion and tension of intersecting cultures within the Hong Kong context. 'Waterfall' transcends mere aesthetics, leveraging the fragility and beauty of fabric to explore themes of resilience, identity, and the search for belonging. Exhibited at West Bund Art & Design, Shanghai and Guangdong Art Week in 2025, the work reinforces Hong Wai's reputation for bridging traditional craft, contemporary art, and crucial social commentary.
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