Yiyi Wang’s practice explores the instability of perception through printmaking, installation, and interactive systems. Her work invites viewers to engage with images that shift, dissolve, or reappear—revealing the tension between visibility and absence. Drawing from Taoist metaphysics, architectural modeling, and traditional ink aesthetics, she constructs visual systems where repetition, negative space, and subtle variation disrupt fixed meaning. Grounded in both material experimentation and conceptual clarity, Wang merges ancient logic with contemporary media to question how reality is structured, remembered, or erased. Her imagery is formally quiet yet charged—inviting reflection on the social, political, and psychological forces that shape what we see and what remains hidden.
Yiyi Wang’s practice explores the instability of perception through printmaking, installation, and interactive systems. Her work invites viewers to engage with images that shift, dissolve, or reappear—revealing the tension between visibility and absence. Drawing from Taoist metaphysics, architectural modeling, and traditional ink aesthetics, she constructs visual systems where repetition, negative space, and subtle variation disrupt fixed meaning. Grounded in both material experimentation and conceptual clarity, Wang merges ancient logic with contemporary media to question how reality is structured, remembered, or erased. Her imagery is formally quiet yet charged—inviting reflection on the social, political, and psychological forces that shape what we see and what remains hidden.