The Corridor Foundation is pleased to announce the solo exhibition Void·Vision by Han Qingzhen. Co-organized with the 11 Contemporary Art Center, the exhibition foregrounds the artist’s sustained inquiry into negative space. Rather than functioning as static pictorial fields, Qingzhen’s abstract compositions operate as generative perceptual systems: color accumulates and disperses rhythmically; pictorial space unfolds organically through gesture and interval; material traces register temporal process and contingency; and compositional forms remain in a state of open-ended evolution. Through this dynamic visual syntax, the work establishes a critical dialogue between inherited aesthetic paradigms and contemporary modes of seeing. The exhibition brings together key works from Qingzhen’s recent practice devoted to the philosophical and formal implications of negative space, and will open to the public on March 27, 2026.
"Indistinct and vague, yet within it there is form." — Chapter 21, Tao Te Ching, Laozi
Negative space is a core aesthetic principle in Chinese art—not merely a compositional tool, but a reflection of traditional Chinese thought on nature, knowledge, and ethics. It values the spontaneous and the spiritual over literal form—a foundational idea in Chinese visual culture, resonating with the poetic ideal of "words ending, but meaning lingering." Contemporary abstract art, through formal experimentation, tension-building, and material innovation, revitalizes this principle. Artist Han Qingzhen engages in a rigorous cross-cultural dialogue, firmly situating the philosophical essence of negative space within the discursive and material frameworks of contemporary abstraction. In doing so, she develops a distinctive system of aesthetic translation.
Qingzhen uses thick, textured plaster as both a surface and an active compositional element. Gestures rooted in classical Chinese calligraphy—such as ti’an (lifting and pressing), kūrùn (dry-moistness), and dùncuò (pause and redirection)—unfold freely on this surface, unconstrained by rigid rules. Lines flow intuitively; layered colors oscillate between presence and absence; curved forms remain open and unstable, echoing the fluid nature of perception itself. The image is no longer a fixed picture. Color interacts and transforms; space is built stroke by stroke; every mark records action, time, and choice. Forms are always in a state of becoming—briefly visible, then already shifting.
Individual visual fragments coalesce across the space to form an open, contemplative field. As visitors engage with the works, their gazes move across overlapping planes, sharing with the artist the real-time making, shifting, and remaking of space. This is not merely a display of artworks. It is a shared act of perception: a space where Qingzhen and visitors together explore negative space—a ground for seeing, thinking, and connecting.