In her latest exhibition entitled “Becoming Again” at Third Floor – Hermès, Korean artist Ran Hwang uses tiny objects to create mesmerising landscapes that reflect on the fragility of life.
January 21st, 2015
“My thoughts are centred on life, which is always blooming and fading. This is a well-known pattern and the law of nature. I believe that the past is connected with the fate of the present. Everything is therefore in a state of becoming or developing again.”
With this artist statement, Ran Hwang has transformed the Third Floor gallery into a magical and luminous large-sized installation made up of a countless number of eco-friendly paper buttons, pins, beads and crystals. Taking a year and a half to complete, each object in this project has been meticulously hammered by hand into the shape of flowers, delicate spider webs and mythical phoenixes.
The repetitive and time-consuming process that is needed to put this installation together is one that the artist relishes. Indeed, she calls it a form of self-meditation.
As further dimension to the piece, moving images of blossoms, phoenixes and snowflakes are transposed onto the Plexiglas panels, appearing and fading away to convey the cycle of time. And because the artwork fills the entire vertical space, the viewer is drawn both towards its intricate detail and overwhelming scale.
Adding to the immersive experience, visitors are able to walk behind the Plexiglas panels where the sharpened, exposed pins are revealed, offering a different perspective to the installation.
As a grand finale at the end of the video, a colourless phoenix undergoes a metamorphosis to become a majestic golden phoenix before disappearing with the blossoms – a symbol of rebirth.
Ran Hwang’s “Becoming Again” is located at Third Floor – Hermès, 541 Orchard Road, Liat Towers, Singapore. Opens daily, 10.30am – 7.30pm. The exhibition closes on 31 January 2015.
A searchable and comprehensive guide for specifying leading products and their suppliers
Keep up to date with the latest and greatest from our industry BFF's!
XTRA celebrates the distinctive and unexpected work of Magis in their Singapore showroom.
In this candid interview, the culinary mastermind behind Singapore’s Nouri and Appetite talks about food as an act of human connection that transcends borders and accolades, the crucial role of technology in preserving its unifying power, and finding a kindred spirit in Gaggenau’s reverence for tradition and relentless pursuit of innovation.
Following its successful inaugural event in early 2024, the Vietnam International Trade Fair for Apparel, Textiles, and Textile Technologies (VIATT) is gearing up for its next instalment in 2025.
Within the intimate confines of compact living, where space is at a premium, efficiency is critical and dining out often trumps home cooking, Gaggenau’s 400 Series Culinary Drawer proves that limited space can, in fact, unlock unlimited culinary possibilities.
The internet never sleeps! Here's the stuff you might have missed
The Sydney- and Fiji-based architect has been honoured with the main award at the 2024 Fiji Architects Association Awards, held last week in Suva.
Functionality doesn’t forego aesthetic appeal in Autex’s new range of acoustic panels that bring organic, highly detailed patterns to scale. Meet Mirage.
Resonant colour, rich materiality and thoughtful spatial planning create a highly functional and beautiful office for BresicWhitney in Mosman, Sydney.
Within the intimate confines of compact living, where space is at a premium, efficiency is critical and dining out often trumps home cooking, Gaggenau’s 400 Series Culinary Drawer proves that limited space can, in fact, unlock unlimited culinary possibilities.