Unfinished Footnotes
Longlati
8.20 - 10.25 2025

UNFINISHED FOOTNOTES
Longlati is pleased to present Unfinished Footnotes, a solo institutional exhibition of Chinese artist Wang He (b. 1983, Beijing), opening on August 20, 2025. Featuring 14 recent paintings on silk, the artist explores the translational and regenerative potential of traditional Chinese media in a contemporary context. Through this practice, Wang constructs a new visual schema wherein “past, present, and future” coexist in the moment, forming a sustained and generative painterly language.
Much like the insertion of footnotes, Wang He embeds fragments of collective cultural memory into his work—subtly and elusively, they linger at the edges of the image rather than taking center stage. These visual traces provoke an active gaze and divergent interpretations, unfolding a field of open-ended annotations. Functioning like marginalia that offer commentary or conceptual extensions, they propel the visual language beyond the frame’s confines.
The notion of Unfinished Footnotes gestures toward a broader spatial construction beyond the image. It is neither a mere supplement to the main narrative nor an unfinished monologue, but rather a multilayered language latent between image, material, and imagination. It suggests that the image is always present, yet constantly deferred—a process of Différance. The “unfinished” signals an openness and the potential for continuous evolution, while the “footnote” evokes a mode of engagement and interpretive trajectory on the part of the viewer. At the convergence of the two, Wang He constructs a floating layer of language—one that drifts between expression and erasure, between history and the present—within the delicate interplay of silk, pigment, and image.
Amid these layered dislocations, we neither return to a pure “First space” of origin, nor are we fully cast into an “Elsewhere” of the Second space. Instead, we enter what cultural theorist Homi Bhabha (b.1949) articulates as the Third Space—a hybrid realm transcending singular affiliations. It is a site where cultural differences give rise to interwoven scenarios of time and space, history and futurity, reality and imagination. As Bhabha writes, it is that Third Space, though unrepresentable in itself, which constitutes the discursive conditions of enunciation (1994, p. 37).
The Third Space carries with it a dense layering of cultural collage and historical suturing. Within Wang He’s paintings, one encounters fragments of ancient artifacts, intact historical imagery, materials rooted in contemporary manufacture, and the “traces” of painting itself—gestures that are neither mimetic nor concealing, but instead hold the weight of temporal sedimentation and suspended memory. Wang He’s consistent artistic strategy—from View Within the Book, View Within the Scope, and View from the Window to his latest Upon the Desktop series—Wang has been to deliberately dissolve the linear logic of the temporal axis. He disassembles and recombines cultural symbols, visual languages, and historical memories from different dimensions, allowing them to intersect and overlay one another visually, while semantically infiltrating each other. Unfinished Footnotes is not a closed set of images, but a methodology of viewing—a re-inscription of history, memory, and identity. Images cease to serve merely as representational devices; they emerge instead as simultaneous presences of time and space—constantly overlapping, perpetually rewritten.
Rather than simply creating images, Wang He constructs a site for the reenactment of memory. He extracts visual fragments from the past and repositions them as footnotes through acts of transfer and imprinting, allowing their original meanings to loosen, shift, and expand. The Cun (brushwork) and patterns may seem rooted in antiquity, yet the disjunction between material and context generates the allure of archaism—an emulated antiquity—not a replica. Subtly, emergent lines and brushstrokes are provisionally reversed, elevated into a new “main text.” Within these unfinished footnotes, the artist invites the viewer as a “co-author,” situated in their own local experience, to trace personal trajectories of meaning across the image’s gaps and seams.

Artist
Wang He
Exhibition Date
20 August - 25 October 2025
Venue
Suhe Haus 4F, 30 Wen'an Road, Jing'an District, Shanghai