Similarly ambiguous is Twisted bones: A hug (2023) by Liu Xin. Xin’s work hangs on the wall and includes two mouths without a face hurling bone-like tendrils made of bronze and porcelain teeth.
A third sculptural work is i’m on it, 包在我身上 by Huidi Xiang. While this piece has a more representational quality than the other aforementioned works, it is a disjointed cartoon-ish hand made of 3D printed resin, motorized and holding a washcloth.
It emits an invisible whisper, a notation that encompasses generational labor, class structures, and care. Each of these works could have fallen out of the paintings that are present.
In The Fifer (피리는여인), a 2024 oil on linen work by artist Sun Woo, a lone faucet appears in a dark crevice or cave. It emerges from the ground not unlike the head of a serpent or a smaller version of the infamous sandworms of Lynch’s 1984 film, Dune. There is an emotional current pulsating in the painted ground, but also functioning as a connector between the artists present.