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In a world driven by fast-flowing images and information, looking seems to have become easier, yet increasingly fleeting. For LAN Zhaoxing and HSIEH Fuyuan, however, artistic creation has always stemmed from a slow and sustained gaze.
Though the two artists use oil paint, sculpture, and ink painting as their respective creative languages, they share a mutual focus on the existential state of humanity in the world. They are in no rush to provide definitive answers, nor do they chase dramatic narratives. Instead, through repeated gazing and continuous labor, they respond to life’s most fundamental question: How do we perceive the world, and how do we find our place within it?
This exhibition presents two distinct yet echoing creative paths. When a landscape ceases to be merely a landscape, and when forms bear the weight of time and spirit, the act of viewing transforms into a way to rediscover both oneself and the world.
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LAN Zhaoxing
LAN Zhaoxing, born in Shanxi in 1977, comes from an artistic lineage grounded in rigorous formal training. She received a bachelor’s degree in Sculpture from Shanxi University in 2001 and a master’s degree in Oil Painting from Tianjin Academy of Fine Arts in 2008. Presenting 40 works from her oeuvre, including 13 oil paintings, 20 ink paintings, 4 sculptures, and 3 relief works, this exhibition offers a comprehensive view of how she constructs a lofty and pure spiritual realm through solid form and philosophical dialectics. LAN’s creative practice stems from speculative thinking. Like a philosophical wanderer, she establishes her stronghold in three-dimensional works while freely traversing the realm of two-dimensional creation.
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LAN Zhaoxing: Mapping Spirit Coordinates in a Solitary Mountain Forest
Inspired by Paul Cézanne in her two-dimensional works, LAN’s landscape paintings value a strong sense of orderliness and musicality. As she puts it, “I truly enjoy the act of hatching lines. The repetitive process itself creates a sense of equilibrium that offers a purposeless yet purposeful pleasure.” The trees under LAN’s brush are often rootless and arranged in orderly rows, while the titles of the works embed philosophical musings, suggesting that her practice unfolds as a Heideggerian wandering off the beaten track—a geometric collage exercise carried out within a forest of thought.
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Finding One's Own Echo in the Silhouette of Others
The figures depicted by LAN Zhaoxing are not portraits in the traditional sense. In works such as her depiction of Paul Klee titled Musician, Vincent Willem van Gogh in Teenage Years, George Dyer in Loner, and Mark Rothko in The Fire-Breather, these creators from art history may appear to be the subjects, but they are in truth vessels for the artist’s own spiritual projection. She once noted, "I treat these figures as spiritual carriers, projecting myself into their experiences and personalities to find a resonance." As a result, the figures become an amalgamation—representing both the other and the self.
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蘭昭形 LAN Zhaoxing
噴火的人 The Fire-Breather, 2026油彩/畫布 Oil on canvas
80 x 60 cmNT$ 362,000 -
Constructing Spiritual Forms Between Words and Things
The relationship between words and things is more than just a connection between language and imagery; for LAN Zhaoxing, it is a process of spiritual transformation. Concrete and abstract descriptions within language frequently trigger her perception of the essence of things, resonating with her own life experiences and becoming the genesis of her creations. Just as Wallace Stevens wrote in his poem: "In my room, the world is beyond understanding; but when I walk, I see that it consists of three or four hills and a cloud...", these lines remind her of the rooms she has lived in at various stages of her life, the mountains and clouds of her hometown, and related imagery and memories from art history, thereby sparking new creative reflections. Guided by words and transformed through physical labor, LAN Zhaoxing gives form to abstract feelings, turning them into concrete objects. She then allows these objects to carry spiritual meaning, generating a brand-new viewing experience. Throughout this transformative process, she distills meaning like a poet while organizing form like a composer.
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蘭昭形 LAN Zhaoxing
這個世界 This World, 2025油彩/畫布 Oil on canvas
160 x 160 cmNT$ 820,000 -
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蘭昭形 LAN Zhaoxing
夜晚的凝視 Night-time Gaze, 2026油彩/畫布 Oil on canvas
80 x 100 cmNT$ 468,000 -
For me, landscape is a fusion of the external world and one's inner state. It is not merely a visual representation, but an active, chosen projection and reflection of the inner world, carrying deep symbolic significance.
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蘭昭形 LAN Zhaoxing
風景的實踐 The Practice of Landscape, 2025油彩/畫布 Oil on canvas
120 x 170 cmNT$ 743,000 -
Installation views
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Carving the Thickness of Spirit Between Light and Form
Painting constructs visual and psychological spaces through color and form, presenting the viewing experience in a two-dimensional language. Relief, on the other hand, grants form a more direct sense of presence through actual physical contours and the interplay of light and shadow. Compared to painting, relief relies more heavily on the participation of light. As light sweeps across the surface, subtle indentations and shadows are awakened, allowing the forms to exhibit a more powerful vitality.
LAN Zhaoxing's wood relief works blend the characteristics of both painting and sculpture, combining color, form, and the inherent thickness of the material itself. By preserving the traces left by sandpaper grit, she allows materiality and spirituality to reflect one another.
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HSIEH Fuyuan
Born in Tainan in 1992, HSIEH received his MFA from the Department of Painting and Calligraphy Arts, National Taiwan University of Arts in 2018, and studied as an exchange student in Japanese painting at the University of Tsukuba in Japan from 2016 to 2017. This experience positioned him at the cultural crossroads of East Asia, enabling him to articulate reflections on Taiwan’s historical positioning through an ambiguous and nuanced visual language. He introduces the digital “image layer” mindset into classical gongbi painting processes, which involve highly detailed brushstrokes, and challenges the conventional perception of gongbi painting as purely delicate and aesthetic. This exhibition features 16 two-dimensional works created in ink and acrylic, including five new pieces from 2026 shown publicly for the first time.
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The sketches for this series of works—including Early Spring, Windy Pines Among a Myriad Valleys, and Snow-capped Mountains and Pavilions—were developed using tablet drawing software. He intentionally retains the raw, fragmented, and at times conflicting traces of the digital creative process. Transforming monumental landscape compositions into light, contemporary experiments, these works reimagine Northern Song masterpieces such as Guo Xi’s Early Spring and Li Tang’s Wind in Pines Among a Myriad of Valleys.
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謝福源 HSIEH Fuyuan
築山庭 Tsukiyama, 2023壓克力顏料、墨/絹本 Acrylic and ink on silk
100 x 140 cmNT$ 198,000 -
His recent 2026 work Green Born from Torn Silk signals a further shift toward a more direct, scriptural mode of expression. In terms of line and structure, he faithfully renders the self through individually distinct, curved, and hesitant brushstrokes, while boldly dividing the pictorial space with vertical lines running from top to bottom. Meanwhile, mint green, lotus pink, and off-white classical pale rosy tones are introduced to convey emotion within the composition. This approach not only seeks a balance between order and chaos, but also encourages viewers to engage with the work through their own lived experience.
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Constructing Islands of Dense Foliage and Translating Classical References Through Layers and Brushstrokes
HSIEH Fuyuan utilizes ink to explore the relationship between nature and time. Each layer of brushwork bridges drawing and writing, capturing both his observation of nature and a visceral record of bodily movement and perception.The core of the exhibition is the Grassy Land series, in which finely rendered, densely detailed leaf forms are used as elemental units, layered into vast, island-like landscapes.
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In the two works New Sense of Peace and Spring Meadows, I wanted to capture the rising vapor manifested by Taiwan’s humid climate, translating the sultry physical sensation I felt into the image. I used repeatedly layered, tiny, curved brushstrokes to depict the slowly ascending heat waves.
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For the piece The Full Tide, I wanted to deconstruct traditional landscape painting into three distinct pictorial elements: on the left, I painted the water; in the middle panel, the reflection of the mountain; and on the far right, the mountain itself.
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謝福源 HSIEH Fuyuan
潮滿 The Full Tide, 2025壓克力顏料、墨/紙本
Acrylic and ink on paper
26 x 34 cm/each, set of 3NT$ 32,000 -
LAN Zhaoxing pursues a “fixed point” grounded in historical depth and philosophical contemplation, using structure as a means to resist worldly noise, while HSIEH Fuyuan perceives “flux” within accumulated layers and the tides of the era, engaging the ambiguity of reality through deconstructive thought. The two artists—one still and one in motion, one rooted in tradition and the other pushing boundaries—together demonstrate the resilience of art shaped by thought. Eslite Gallery invites visitors into the exhibition space to roam between philosophical cabins and intricate islands, and witness how the most compelling truths are distilled within the shifting coordinates of contemporary life.
LAN Zhaoxing x HSIEH Fuyuan
■ Date: June 13 to August 8, 2026
■ Address: ESLITE GALLERY | B1, No. 88, Yanchang Rd., Xinyi Dist., Taipei City 110055, Taiwan (eslite spectrum Songyan)
■ Opening Hours: 11am-7pm, Tuesday – Saturday
LAN Zhaoxing x HSIEH Fuyuan
Current viewing_room










