TAIPEI (Taiwan News) — Artist Wang Te-yu’s (王德瑜) exhibition "No. 108" opened on Sunday at ss space studio in Bali District, New Taipei.
Wang’s installation features inflatable spheres that explore the multilayered meaning of space, CNA reported. As time passes, shifting light and shadow interact with the environment, creating dynamic changes within the exhibition.
She translates these subtle visual experiences into installation works, aiming to capture and extend fluid perception. “Every sensory experience may disturb, erase, reconstruct, or reveal the relationship between oneself and the surrounding world,” she said.
Wang describes her creative process as designing “invisible mechanisms” that guide body movement and sensory perception. Through spatial pathways and objects, she draws viewers into an unusual yet familiar setting, where delicate yet unremarkable moments unfold.
Born in 1970, Wang graduated from Taipei National University of the Arts with a degree in fine arts. She later developed a series of installation works named in sequential numbers, beginning with her first inflatable piece, "No. 25," in 1996.
Exhibition "No. 108" runs from March 16 to April 20.