Shengyu Chen
Fortune teller, Artist, Curator
London & Chaozhou
MA @csm_macp
@momingtang_2024

Work in progress
“…风很大,在一个有雨的晚上,逃难者和梨树各自赤裸地躺在长堤上,无能地接受命运,数十年如此夜”Notes for 27 May 2025

Work in progress
“…风很大,在一个有雨的晚上,逃难者和梨树各自赤裸地躺在长堤上,无能地接受命运,数十年如此夜”Notes for 27 May 2025

Work in progress
“…风很大,在一个有雨的晚上,逃难者和梨树各自赤裸地躺在长堤上,无能地接受命运,数十年如此夜”Notes for 27 May 2025

Work in progress
“…风很大,在一个有雨的晚上,逃难者和梨树各自赤裸地躺在长堤上,无能地接受命运,数十年如此夜”Notes for 27 May 2025

WIP in the darkroom.
“Close your lips, or yesterday’s butterflies will take flight.”

WIP in the darkroom.
“Close your lips, or yesterday’s butterflies will take flight.”

WIP in the darkroom.
“Close your lips, or yesterday’s butterflies will take flight.”

Ongoing project, “…and the rain still, still there…”, What posture must one adopt to approach the truth, What does a drowning person clutching water plants look like?

Ongoing project, “…and the rain still, still there…”, What posture must one adopt to approach the truth, What does a drowning person clutching water plants look like?

A Comment for Perfect Photo produce
“When discussing the corruption of the image, Régis Debray did not recognise that, as images are reproduced, their nature does not simply fail or reorganise through iteration. Instead, through a sustained process of institutionalisation, they gradually degenerate—becoming defined by politicised terminologies that shape both discourse and perception. Eventually, under the guise of being “indefinable” and “beyond challenge”, such images are endlessly reproduced as perfect, regulated forms: an aesthetic of obedience that serves the maintenance of order—a kind of blindness, confusion, and false tolerance masquerading as openness. Yet images that neglect their own material and technical conditions, relying solely on predetermined narratives and moral obligations, can scarcely sustain themselves. They depend on the conclusive rhetoric authorised by institutional systems, constructing imagination detached from the material reality of the image itself.
Even so, the meanings and conditions that an image can articulate remain fundamentally autonomous. The image does not collapse into a set of interchangeable surfaces, nor is it supplanted by the deceptive imaginaries generated through ideological control. The formation of an image is inseparable from its material structure, technical conditions, and mediatic apparatus. It is only on this level that representation regains its validity—its ability to represent at all. The works in this exhibition operate within such a framework: by returning to the sites of image production—through optical, chemical, digital, and mechanical processes such as etching and development—they reconsider how the image might resist flattening, and how it may reconstruct experience through more concrete, multidimensional modes of representation. “
Artists: Yiding Chen @yidinger_c , Gina Cross @gina_cross_artist , Matilda Yueyang Peng @matilda_n9 , Kayla Jie Wang @kayla_jiee , Dashen Zhang @dashshenz
Curators: AUTOMATIC PROCESS, Shengyu Chen @bugaoming

A Comment for Perfect Photo produce
“When discussing the corruption of the image, Régis Debray did not recognise that, as images are reproduced, their nature does not simply fail or reorganise through iteration. Instead, through a sustained process of institutionalisation, they gradually degenerate—becoming defined by politicised terminologies that shape both discourse and perception. Eventually, under the guise of being “indefinable” and “beyond challenge”, such images are endlessly reproduced as perfect, regulated forms: an aesthetic of obedience that serves the maintenance of order—a kind of blindness, confusion, and false tolerance masquerading as openness. Yet images that neglect their own material and technical conditions, relying solely on predetermined narratives and moral obligations, can scarcely sustain themselves. They depend on the conclusive rhetoric authorised by institutional systems, constructing imagination detached from the material reality of the image itself.
Even so, the meanings and conditions that an image can articulate remain fundamentally autonomous. The image does not collapse into a set of interchangeable surfaces, nor is it supplanted by the deceptive imaginaries generated through ideological control. The formation of an image is inseparable from its material structure, technical conditions, and mediatic apparatus. It is only on this level that representation regains its validity—its ability to represent at all. The works in this exhibition operate within such a framework: by returning to the sites of image production—through optical, chemical, digital, and mechanical processes such as etching and development—they reconsider how the image might resist flattening, and how it may reconstruct experience through more concrete, multidimensional modes of representation. “
Artists: Yiding Chen @yidinger_c , Gina Cross @gina_cross_artist , Matilda Yueyang Peng @matilda_n9 , Kayla Jie Wang @kayla_jiee , Dashen Zhang @dashshenz
Curators: AUTOMATIC PROCESS, Shengyu Chen @bugaoming

A Comment for Perfect Photo produce
“When discussing the corruption of the image, Régis Debray did not recognise that, as images are reproduced, their nature does not simply fail or reorganise through iteration. Instead, through a sustained process of institutionalisation, they gradually degenerate—becoming defined by politicised terminologies that shape both discourse and perception. Eventually, under the guise of being “indefinable” and “beyond challenge”, such images are endlessly reproduced as perfect, regulated forms: an aesthetic of obedience that serves the maintenance of order—a kind of blindness, confusion, and false tolerance masquerading as openness. Yet images that neglect their own material and technical conditions, relying solely on predetermined narratives and moral obligations, can scarcely sustain themselves. They depend on the conclusive rhetoric authorised by institutional systems, constructing imagination detached from the material reality of the image itself.
Even so, the meanings and conditions that an image can articulate remain fundamentally autonomous. The image does not collapse into a set of interchangeable surfaces, nor is it supplanted by the deceptive imaginaries generated through ideological control. The formation of an image is inseparable from its material structure, technical conditions, and mediatic apparatus. It is only on this level that representation regains its validity—its ability to represent at all. The works in this exhibition operate within such a framework: by returning to the sites of image production—through optical, chemical, digital, and mechanical processes such as etching and development—they reconsider how the image might resist flattening, and how it may reconstruct experience through more concrete, multidimensional modes of representation. “
Artists: Yiding Chen @yidinger_c , Gina Cross @gina_cross_artist , Matilda Yueyang Peng @matilda_n9 , Kayla Jie Wang @kayla_jiee , Dashen Zhang @dashshenz
Curators: AUTOMATIC PROCESS, Shengyu Chen @bugaoming

A Comment for Perfect Photo produce
“When discussing the corruption of the image, Régis Debray did not recognise that, as images are reproduced, their nature does not simply fail or reorganise through iteration. Instead, through a sustained process of institutionalisation, they gradually degenerate—becoming defined by politicised terminologies that shape both discourse and perception. Eventually, under the guise of being “indefinable” and “beyond challenge”, such images are endlessly reproduced as perfect, regulated forms: an aesthetic of obedience that serves the maintenance of order—a kind of blindness, confusion, and false tolerance masquerading as openness. Yet images that neglect their own material and technical conditions, relying solely on predetermined narratives and moral obligations, can scarcely sustain themselves. They depend on the conclusive rhetoric authorised by institutional systems, constructing imagination detached from the material reality of the image itself.
Even so, the meanings and conditions that an image can articulate remain fundamentally autonomous. The image does not collapse into a set of interchangeable surfaces, nor is it supplanted by the deceptive imaginaries generated through ideological control. The formation of an image is inseparable from its material structure, technical conditions, and mediatic apparatus. It is only on this level that representation regains its validity—its ability to represent at all. The works in this exhibition operate within such a framework: by returning to the sites of image production—through optical, chemical, digital, and mechanical processes such as etching and development—they reconsider how the image might resist flattening, and how it may reconstruct experience through more concrete, multidimensional modes of representation. “
Artists: Yiding Chen @yidinger_c , Gina Cross @gina_cross_artist , Matilda Yueyang Peng @matilda_n9 , Kayla Jie Wang @kayla_jiee , Dashen Zhang @dashshenz
Curators: AUTOMATIC PROCESS, Shengyu Chen @bugaoming

A Comment for Perfect Photo produce
“When discussing the corruption of the image, Régis Debray did not recognise that, as images are reproduced, their nature does not simply fail or reorganise through iteration. Instead, through a sustained process of institutionalisation, they gradually degenerate—becoming defined by politicised terminologies that shape both discourse and perception. Eventually, under the guise of being “indefinable” and “beyond challenge”, such images are endlessly reproduced as perfect, regulated forms: an aesthetic of obedience that serves the maintenance of order—a kind of blindness, confusion, and false tolerance masquerading as openness. Yet images that neglect their own material and technical conditions, relying solely on predetermined narratives and moral obligations, can scarcely sustain themselves. They depend on the conclusive rhetoric authorised by institutional systems, constructing imagination detached from the material reality of the image itself.
Even so, the meanings and conditions that an image can articulate remain fundamentally autonomous. The image does not collapse into a set of interchangeable surfaces, nor is it supplanted by the deceptive imaginaries generated through ideological control. The formation of an image is inseparable from its material structure, technical conditions, and mediatic apparatus. It is only on this level that representation regains its validity—its ability to represent at all. The works in this exhibition operate within such a framework: by returning to the sites of image production—through optical, chemical, digital, and mechanical processes such as etching and development—they reconsider how the image might resist flattening, and how it may reconstruct experience through more concrete, multidimensional modes of representation. “
Artists: Yiding Chen @yidinger_c , Gina Cross @gina_cross_artist , Matilda Yueyang Peng @matilda_n9 , Kayla Jie Wang @kayla_jiee , Dashen Zhang @dashshenz
Curators: AUTOMATIC PROCESS, Shengyu Chen @bugaoming

A Comment for Perfect Photo produce
“When discussing the corruption of the image, Régis Debray did not recognise that, as images are reproduced, their nature does not simply fail or reorganise through iteration. Instead, through a sustained process of institutionalisation, they gradually degenerate—becoming defined by politicised terminologies that shape both discourse and perception. Eventually, under the guise of being “indefinable” and “beyond challenge”, such images are endlessly reproduced as perfect, regulated forms: an aesthetic of obedience that serves the maintenance of order—a kind of blindness, confusion, and false tolerance masquerading as openness. Yet images that neglect their own material and technical conditions, relying solely on predetermined narratives and moral obligations, can scarcely sustain themselves. They depend on the conclusive rhetoric authorised by institutional systems, constructing imagination detached from the material reality of the image itself.
Even so, the meanings and conditions that an image can articulate remain fundamentally autonomous. The image does not collapse into a set of interchangeable surfaces, nor is it supplanted by the deceptive imaginaries generated through ideological control. The formation of an image is inseparable from its material structure, technical conditions, and mediatic apparatus. It is only on this level that representation regains its validity—its ability to represent at all. The works in this exhibition operate within such a framework: by returning to the sites of image production—through optical, chemical, digital, and mechanical processes such as etching and development—they reconsider how the image might resist flattening, and how it may reconstruct experience through more concrete, multidimensional modes of representation. “
Artists: Yiding Chen @yidinger_c , Gina Cross @gina_cross_artist , Matilda Yueyang Peng @matilda_n9 , Kayla Jie Wang @kayla_jiee , Dashen Zhang @dashshenz
Curators: AUTOMATIC PROCESS, Shengyu Chen @bugaoming

A Comment for Perfect Photo produce
“When discussing the corruption of the image, Régis Debray did not recognise that, as images are reproduced, their nature does not simply fail or reorganise through iteration. Instead, through a sustained process of institutionalisation, they gradually degenerate—becoming defined by politicised terminologies that shape both discourse and perception. Eventually, under the guise of being “indefinable” and “beyond challenge”, such images are endlessly reproduced as perfect, regulated forms: an aesthetic of obedience that serves the maintenance of order—a kind of blindness, confusion, and false tolerance masquerading as openness. Yet images that neglect their own material and technical conditions, relying solely on predetermined narratives and moral obligations, can scarcely sustain themselves. They depend on the conclusive rhetoric authorised by institutional systems, constructing imagination detached from the material reality of the image itself.
Even so, the meanings and conditions that an image can articulate remain fundamentally autonomous. The image does not collapse into a set of interchangeable surfaces, nor is it supplanted by the deceptive imaginaries generated through ideological control. The formation of an image is inseparable from its material structure, technical conditions, and mediatic apparatus. It is only on this level that representation regains its validity—its ability to represent at all. The works in this exhibition operate within such a framework: by returning to the sites of image production—through optical, chemical, digital, and mechanical processes such as etching and development—they reconsider how the image might resist flattening, and how it may reconstruct experience through more concrete, multidimensional modes of representation. “
Artists: Yiding Chen @yidinger_c , Gina Cross @gina_cross_artist , Matilda Yueyang Peng @matilda_n9 , Kayla Jie Wang @kayla_jiee , Dashen Zhang @dashshenz
Curators: AUTOMATIC PROCESS, Shengyu Chen @bugaoming

A Comment for Perfect Photo produce
“When discussing the corruption of the image, Régis Debray did not recognise that, as images are reproduced, their nature does not simply fail or reorganise through iteration. Instead, through a sustained process of institutionalisation, they gradually degenerate—becoming defined by politicised terminologies that shape both discourse and perception. Eventually, under the guise of being “indefinable” and “beyond challenge”, such images are endlessly reproduced as perfect, regulated forms: an aesthetic of obedience that serves the maintenance of order—a kind of blindness, confusion, and false tolerance masquerading as openness. Yet images that neglect their own material and technical conditions, relying solely on predetermined narratives and moral obligations, can scarcely sustain themselves. They depend on the conclusive rhetoric authorised by institutional systems, constructing imagination detached from the material reality of the image itself.
Even so, the meanings and conditions that an image can articulate remain fundamentally autonomous. The image does not collapse into a set of interchangeable surfaces, nor is it supplanted by the deceptive imaginaries generated through ideological control. The formation of an image is inseparable from its material structure, technical conditions, and mediatic apparatus. It is only on this level that representation regains its validity—its ability to represent at all. The works in this exhibition operate within such a framework: by returning to the sites of image production—through optical, chemical, digital, and mechanical processes such as etching and development—they reconsider how the image might resist flattening, and how it may reconstruct experience through more concrete, multidimensional modes of representation. “
Artists: Yiding Chen @yidinger_c , Gina Cross @gina_cross_artist , Matilda Yueyang Peng @matilda_n9 , Kayla Jie Wang @kayla_jiee , Dashen Zhang @dashshenz
Curators: AUTOMATIC PROCESS, Shengyu Chen @bugaoming

A Comment for Perfect Photo produce
“When discussing the corruption of the image, Régis Debray did not recognise that, as images are reproduced, their nature does not simply fail or reorganise through iteration. Instead, through a sustained process of institutionalisation, they gradually degenerate—becoming defined by politicised terminologies that shape both discourse and perception. Eventually, under the guise of being “indefinable” and “beyond challenge”, such images are endlessly reproduced as perfect, regulated forms: an aesthetic of obedience that serves the maintenance of order—a kind of blindness, confusion, and false tolerance masquerading as openness. Yet images that neglect their own material and technical conditions, relying solely on predetermined narratives and moral obligations, can scarcely sustain themselves. They depend on the conclusive rhetoric authorised by institutional systems, constructing imagination detached from the material reality of the image itself.
Even so, the meanings and conditions that an image can articulate remain fundamentally autonomous. The image does not collapse into a set of interchangeable surfaces, nor is it supplanted by the deceptive imaginaries generated through ideological control. The formation of an image is inseparable from its material structure, technical conditions, and mediatic apparatus. It is only on this level that representation regains its validity—its ability to represent at all. The works in this exhibition operate within such a framework: by returning to the sites of image production—through optical, chemical, digital, and mechanical processes such as etching and development—they reconsider how the image might resist flattening, and how it may reconstruct experience through more concrete, multidimensional modes of representation. “
Artists: Yiding Chen @yidinger_c , Gina Cross @gina_cross_artist , Matilda Yueyang Peng @matilda_n9 , Kayla Jie Wang @kayla_jiee , Dashen Zhang @dashshenz
Curators: AUTOMATIC PROCESS, Shengyu Chen @bugaoming

In collaboration with Automatic Process, this exhibition revisits the material and technical conditions of the image — questioning how representation can sustain itself beyond institutional perfection. Through optical, chemical, digital, and mechanical experiments, the works explore the image as a living, self-constructing event rather than a surface of replication.
🜂
Opening: 25 October, 2025
Venue: @garageap_chengdu GAP, 14-9-5, Shuanglin Henglu Rd. M, Chenghua District, Chengdu
Duration: 25 October - 16 November 2025 (open Tuesdays to Sundays from 10:00 to 18:00)
Artist: Yiding Chen @yidinger_c , Matilda Yueyang Peng @matilda_n9 , Kayla Jie Wang @kayla_jiee , Dashen Zhang @dashshenz , Gina Cross @ginacross_
—
Curated by Shengyu Chen & Automatic Process
#exhibition #chengdu #contemporaryart #photographer #imagemaking #materiality

In collaboration with Automatic Process, this exhibition revisits the material and technical conditions of the image — questioning how representation can sustain itself beyond institutional perfection. Through optical, chemical, digital, and mechanical experiments, the works explore the image as a living, self-constructing event rather than a surface of replication.
🜂
Opening: 25 October, 2025
Venue: @garageap_chengdu GAP, 14-9-5, Shuanglin Henglu Rd. M, Chenghua District, Chengdu
Duration: 25 October - 16 November 2025 (open Tuesdays to Sundays from 10:00 to 18:00)
Artist: Yiding Chen @yidinger_c , Matilda Yueyang Peng @matilda_n9 , Kayla Jie Wang @kayla_jiee , Dashen Zhang @dashshenz , Gina Cross @ginacross_
—
Curated by Shengyu Chen & Automatic Process
#exhibition #chengdu #contemporaryart #photographer #imagemaking #materiality

In collaboration with Automatic Process, this exhibition revisits the material and technical conditions of the image — questioning how representation can sustain itself beyond institutional perfection. Through optical, chemical, digital, and mechanical experiments, the works explore the image as a living, self-constructing event rather than a surface of replication.
🜂
Opening: 25 October, 2025
Venue: @garageap_chengdu GAP, 14-9-5, Shuanglin Henglu Rd. M, Chenghua District, Chengdu
Duration: 25 October - 16 November 2025 (open Tuesdays to Sundays from 10:00 to 18:00)
Artist: Yiding Chen @yidinger_c , Matilda Yueyang Peng @matilda_n9 , Kayla Jie Wang @kayla_jiee , Dashen Zhang @dashshenz , Gina Cross @ginacross_
—
Curated by Shengyu Chen & Automatic Process
#exhibition #chengdu #contemporaryart #photographer #imagemaking #materiality

In collaboration with Automatic Process, this exhibition revisits the material and technical conditions of the image — questioning how representation can sustain itself beyond institutional perfection. Through optical, chemical, digital, and mechanical experiments, the works explore the image as a living, self-constructing event rather than a surface of replication.
🜂
Opening: 25 October, 2025
Venue: @garageap_chengdu GAP, 14-9-5, Shuanglin Henglu Rd. M, Chenghua District, Chengdu
Duration: 25 October - 16 November 2025 (open Tuesdays to Sundays from 10:00 to 18:00)
Artist: Yiding Chen @yidinger_c , Matilda Yueyang Peng @matilda_n9 , Kayla Jie Wang @kayla_jiee , Dashen Zhang @dashshenz , Gina Cross @ginacross_
—
Curated by Shengyu Chen & Automatic Process
#exhibition #chengdu #contemporaryart #photographer #imagemaking #materiality

In collaboration with Automatic Process, this exhibition revisits the material and technical conditions of the image — questioning how representation can sustain itself beyond institutional perfection. Through optical, chemical, digital, and mechanical experiments, the works explore the image as a living, self-constructing event rather than a surface of replication.
🜂
Opening: 25 October, 2025
Venue: @garageap_chengdu GAP, 14-9-5, Shuanglin Henglu Rd. M, Chenghua District, Chengdu
Duration: 25 October - 16 November 2025 (open Tuesdays to Sundays from 10:00 to 18:00)
Artist: Yiding Chen @yidinger_c , Matilda Yueyang Peng @matilda_n9 , Kayla Jie Wang @kayla_jiee , Dashen Zhang @dashshenz , Gina Cross @ginacross_
—
Curated by Shengyu Chen & Automatic Process
#exhibition #chengdu #contemporaryart #photographer #imagemaking #materiality

Some stills of my second solo show “Appling Eye Medicine”in @huanphotism , Chengdu.

Some stills of my second solo show “Appling Eye Medicine”in @huanphotism , Chengdu.

Some stills of my second solo show “Appling Eye Medicine”in @huanphotism , Chengdu.

Some stills of my second solo show “Appling Eye Medicine”in @huanphotism , Chengdu.

Some stills of my second solo show “Appling Eye Medicine”in @huanphotism , Chengdu.

Some stills of my second solo show “Appling Eye Medicine”in @huanphotism , Chengdu.

Exhibition:
Applying Eye Medicine
Artist:
Shengyu Chen
Exhibition Period:
2025.07.27-8.17 (Close on Mondays)
Opening time:
July 26, 2025 at 4:00 PM.
Exhibition Venue:
No. 63, Section 2, Shenxianshu South Road, Chengdu, Sichuan Province, China
-
The negatives in this project were found by chance at a flea market, tucked inside a yellowing pharmacy bag—like unclaimed prescriptions scattered through time. Their photographers and the moments they captured had long faded, but the way they reached me felt too personal to ignore. If a photograph is a kind of remedy, what gives us the right to peer into someone else’s wound?
Looking at another’s image always involves a degree of intrusion. To soften this, I chose to “medicate the eye.” I scorched the negatives with fire, blistering the emulsion and stripping away clarity. Then, I sealed them in wax, inspired by the texture of traditional herbal pills. This layer blocked oxygen—and with it, the possibility of direct seeing. What remains are images that unfold slowly, like delayed medicine: faint, obscured, and uncertain.
They resist full exposure. The charred edges and waxen surfaces hold viewers at a distance, suspending the image between presence and absence. These photographs no longer tell specific stories, but act as material metaphors for memory, erasure, and return. Their value lies not in what they reveal, but in how we choose to witness them—with care, distance, and respect.

Exhibition:
Applying Eye Medicine
Artist:
Shengyu Chen
Exhibition Period:
2025.07.27-8.17 (Close on Mondays)
Opening time:
July 26, 2025 at 4:00 PM.
Exhibition Venue:
No. 63, Section 2, Shenxianshu South Road, Chengdu, Sichuan Province, China
-
The negatives in this project were found by chance at a flea market, tucked inside a yellowing pharmacy bag—like unclaimed prescriptions scattered through time. Their photographers and the moments they captured had long faded, but the way they reached me felt too personal to ignore. If a photograph is a kind of remedy, what gives us the right to peer into someone else’s wound?
Looking at another’s image always involves a degree of intrusion. To soften this, I chose to “medicate the eye.” I scorched the negatives with fire, blistering the emulsion and stripping away clarity. Then, I sealed them in wax, inspired by the texture of traditional herbal pills. This layer blocked oxygen—and with it, the possibility of direct seeing. What remains are images that unfold slowly, like delayed medicine: faint, obscured, and uncertain.
They resist full exposure. The charred edges and waxen surfaces hold viewers at a distance, suspending the image between presence and absence. These photographs no longer tell specific stories, but act as material metaphors for memory, erasure, and return. Their value lies not in what they reveal, but in how we choose to witness them—with care, distance, and respect.

Exhibition:
Applying Eye Medicine
Artist:
Shengyu Chen
Exhibition Period:
2025.07.27-8.17 (Close on Mondays)
Opening time:
July 26, 2025 at 4:00 PM.
Exhibition Venue:
No. 63, Section 2, Shenxianshu South Road, Chengdu, Sichuan Province, China
-
The negatives in this project were found by chance at a flea market, tucked inside a yellowing pharmacy bag—like unclaimed prescriptions scattered through time. Their photographers and the moments they captured had long faded, but the way they reached me felt too personal to ignore. If a photograph is a kind of remedy, what gives us the right to peer into someone else’s wound?
Looking at another’s image always involves a degree of intrusion. To soften this, I chose to “medicate the eye.” I scorched the negatives with fire, blistering the emulsion and stripping away clarity. Then, I sealed them in wax, inspired by the texture of traditional herbal pills. This layer blocked oxygen—and with it, the possibility of direct seeing. What remains are images that unfold slowly, like delayed medicine: faint, obscured, and uncertain.
They resist full exposure. The charred edges and waxen surfaces hold viewers at a distance, suspending the image between presence and absence. These photographs no longer tell specific stories, but act as material metaphors for memory, erasure, and return. Their value lies not in what they reveal, but in how we choose to witness them—with care, distance, and respect.

Exhibition:
Applying Eye Medicine
Artist:
Shengyu Chen
Exhibition Period:
2025.07.27-8.17 (Close on Mondays)
Opening time:
July 26, 2025 at 4:00 PM.
Exhibition Venue:
No. 63, Section 2, Shenxianshu South Road, Chengdu, Sichuan Province, China
-
The negatives in this project were found by chance at a flea market, tucked inside a yellowing pharmacy bag—like unclaimed prescriptions scattered through time. Their photographers and the moments they captured had long faded, but the way they reached me felt too personal to ignore. If a photograph is a kind of remedy, what gives us the right to peer into someone else’s wound?
Looking at another’s image always involves a degree of intrusion. To soften this, I chose to “medicate the eye.” I scorched the negatives with fire, blistering the emulsion and stripping away clarity. Then, I sealed them in wax, inspired by the texture of traditional herbal pills. This layer blocked oxygen—and with it, the possibility of direct seeing. What remains are images that unfold slowly, like delayed medicine: faint, obscured, and uncertain.
They resist full exposure. The charred edges and waxen surfaces hold viewers at a distance, suspending the image between presence and absence. These photographs no longer tell specific stories, but act as material metaphors for memory, erasure, and return. Their value lies not in what they reveal, but in how we choose to witness them—with care, distance, and respect.
Trình Xem Câu Chuyện Instagram là một công cụ dễ sử dụng giúp bạn xem và lưu câu chuyện Instagram, video, ảnh hoặc IGTV một cách bí mật. Với dịch vụ này, bạn có thể tải xuống nội dung và thưởng thức ngoại tuyến bất cứ lúc nào. Nếu bạn tìm thấy điều gì đó thú vị trên Instagram mà bạn muốn xem sau này hoặc muốn xem câu chuyện mà vẫn giữ ẩn danh, Trình Xem của chúng tôi là lựa chọn hoàn hảo. Anonstories cung cấp giải pháp tuyệt vời để giữ kín danh tính của bạn. Instagram ra mắt tính năng Câu Chuyện vào tháng 8 năm 2023, và nhanh chóng được các nền tảng khác áp dụng do định dạng hấp dẫn và nhạy cảm với thời gian. Câu Chuyện cho phép người dùng chia sẻ cập nhật nhanh, bất kể là ảnh, video, hay selfie, được bổ sung với văn bản, emoji, hoặc bộ lọc, và chỉ hiển thị trong 24 giờ. Khoảng thời gian giới hạn này tạo ra mức độ tương tác cao so với các bài đăng thường xuyên. Trong thế giới ngày nay, Câu Chuyện là một trong những cách phổ biến nhất để kết nối và giao tiếp trên mạng xã hội. Tuy nhiên, khi bạn xem một Câu Chuyện, người tạo có thể thấy tên của bạn trong danh sách người xem, điều này có thể gây lo ngại về quyền riêng tư. Nếu bạn muốn duyệt Câu Chuyện mà không bị phát hiện, Anonstories sẽ hữu ích. Nó cho phép bạn xem nội dung công khai trên Instagram mà không tiết lộ danh tính của mình. Chỉ cần nhập tên người dùng của hồ sơ mà bạn tò mò và công cụ này sẽ hiển thị Câu Chuyện mới nhất của họ. Các tính năng của Trình Xem Anonstories: - Duyệt Ẩn Danh: Xem Câu Chuyện mà không xuất hiện trong danh sách người xem. - Không Cần Tài Khoản: Xem nội dung công khai mà không cần đăng ký tài khoản Instagram. - Tải Nội Dung: Lưu bất kỳ nội dung Câu Chuyện nào trực tiếp vào thiết bị của bạn để sử dụng ngoại tuyến. - Xem Highlight: Truy cập các Highlight trên Instagram, ngay cả khi đã qua 24 giờ. - Theo Dõi Đăng Lại: Theo dõi các bài đăng lại hoặc mức độ tương tác trên Câu Chuyện của hồ sơ cá nhân. Hạn chế: - Công cụ này chỉ hoạt động với các tài khoản công khai; các tài khoản riêng tư không thể truy cập. Lợi ích: - Thân thiện với quyền riêng tư: Xem bất kỳ nội dung Instagram nào mà không bị phát hiện. - Đơn giản và dễ dàng: Không cần cài đặt ứng dụng hoặc đăng ký. - Công cụ độc quyền: Tải và quản lý nội dung theo cách mà Instagram không cung cấp.
Theo dõi các cập nhật Instagram một cách kín đáo trong khi bảo vệ quyền riêng tư của bạn và vẫn giữ ẩn danh.
Xem hồ sơ và ảnh một cách ẩn danh dễ dàng với Trình Xem Hồ Sơ Riêng Tư.
Công cụ miễn phí này cho phép bạn xem Câu Chuyện Instagram ẩn danh, đảm bảo hoạt động của bạn không bị phát hiện bởi người tải lên câu chuyện.
Anonstories cho phép người dùng xem Câu Chuyện Instagram mà không cảnh báo người tạo.
Hoạt động mượt mà trên iOS, Android, Windows, macOS và các trình duyệt hiện đại như Chrome và Safari.
Ưu tiên duyệt web an toàn, ẩn danh mà không yêu cầu thông tin đăng nhập.
Người dùng có thể xem Câu Chuyện công khai chỉ bằng cách nhập tên người dùng—không cần tài khoản.
Tải ảnh (JPEG) và video (MP4) một cách dễ dàng.
Dịch vụ này miễn phí.
Nội dung từ các tài khoản riêng tư chỉ có thể truy cập bởi những người theo dõi.
Các tệp chỉ được sử dụng cho mục đích cá nhân hoặc giáo dục và phải tuân thủ quy định bản quyền.
Nhập tên người dùng công khai để xem hoặc tải xuống câu chuyện. Dịch vụ tạo liên kết trực tiếp để lưu nội dung vào thiết bị của bạn.