Roi Wang

Roi Wang's practice primarily revolves around two-dimensional works, exploring themes of time, memory, and the cycle of life. Using desaturated colors and blurred contours, she depicts traces that have not been completely erased. The imagery in her paintings often appears in pairs, mirroring each other while maintaining a sense of distance—like echoes of time or memories that have yet to fully heal.
Her work extends beyond the canvas into the exhibition space and the materials themselves. The paintings are arranged at varying heights along the walls, some positioned close to the floor or suspended from wooden pillars, as if allowing them to breathe within reality. She assembles fallen branches and leaves with hot-melt glue, preserving what has passed, while her recent text-based works deconstruct and reconstruct personal memories, capturing emotional traces within unreadable fragments.
Rather than providing answers, her art exists in the space between fragmentation, transience, and reconstruction, giving form to time and allowing the past to endure.
Her work extends beyond the canvas into the exhibition space and the materials themselves. The paintings are arranged at varying heights along the walls, some positioned close to the floor or suspended from wooden pillars, as if allowing them to breathe within reality. She assembles fallen branches and leaves with hot-melt glue, preserving what has passed, while her recent text-based works deconstruct and reconstruct personal memories, capturing emotional traces within unreadable fragments.
Rather than providing answers, her art exists in the space between fragmentation, transience, and reconstruction, giving form to time and allowing the past to endure.