Ornament: Her Minor Rituals: Curated by Weifan Mo and Xumeng Zhang
LATITUDE Gallery is pleased to introduce L@antipode Project, a new curatorial initiative dedicated to presenting emerging voices through concept-driven, research-oriented exhibitions that extend beyond the constraints of a fixed physical space. Taking its name from “antipode”, points on the earth that are at once most distant and precisely mirrored, the project embraces practices that exist across differences without hierarchy. Rather than tracing lineage or resemblance, it foregrounds artists as independent positions, each articulating a distinct relationship to the world. In doing so, L@antipode seeks to hold space for emerging voices to unfold on their own terms, as singular presences rather than echoes.
As its inaugural project, Ornament: Her Minor Rituals brings together six emerging female artists in a group exhibition that unfolds as a quiet yet insistent continuation of Women’s Month. Featuring works by Xindi Cindy Hu, Yichun Huang, Lhamo Yue Liu, Yena Seo-Yeon Park, Zhizi Wu, and Yilin Zhang, the exhibition is curated by Weifan Mo and Xumeng Zhang.
Ornament is once claimed as a crime by Adolf Loos—an assertion that has been quietly internalized within the unconscious reflexes of mainstream modern art history, where legitimacy accrues only to what is concept-driven and preordained in meaning. Concision, flatness, and measured restraint have come to visually define the modern and the refined; ornament, in its excess and proliferation, is cast as regressive and superficial. Against this blunted instinct, we turn to ornament as a feminine revolt in this show.
Here, ornament is not an embellishment but an insurgent surface of reflexivity—an opening through which form begins to think before being complacently subsumed by rationality. Form and surface, then, cannot be understood as passive exteriors awaiting content, as if meaning were something to be laid over them. Their purposiveness is active at the moment of appearance, not retrospectively assigned. The surface is not a site awaiting inscription; it quickens, already humming with a secret insistence, already turning in on itself and thickening with its own interior logic. Ornamentality thus compels a radical reconsideration of these sensory intensities within artistic production: not as something secondary, but as that which brings creativity into view in its most unvarnished and integral form.
Ornament calls us on the incantatory abstract. Abstract—Clarice Lispector whispers in The Foreign Legion—is “a more delicate and more difficult reality, less visible to the naked eye.” This reality is forged through countless repetitions—through poetics in flux and the body’s circulating intensities. The ornamental does not conceal depth or meaning. Meaning arrives as it is condensed as an afterlife of these repetitions.
Xindi Hu constructs a fractured field of reflection in The Blue Whispers, where mirrored surfaces no longer stabilize vision but gently disperse it, allowing perception to drift across shifting fragments in which time gathers rather than moves forward. Zhizi Wu’s Branched Road loosens the idea of a singular path, unfolding instead as a quiet field of divergence where each turn opens onto further uncertainty, and choice lingers as a subtle yet persistent pressure. In Yena Seo-Yeon Park’s work, flame-like figures draw close to one another, their forms wavering between separation and merging, holding intimacy as something tender, unstable, and sustained through continual exchange. Across these practices, figuration becomes less a fixed depiction of the body than a shifting space through which perception and relation softly take shape.
Yichun Huang arranges the pictorial field through delicate geometric tensions, where forms meet, overlap, and gently interrupt one another, allowing fleeting and contradictory affects to coexist within the same image. Yilin Zhang moves within a more fluid rhythm, tracing water-like lines that drift between control and release, where trauma and spirituality fold into one another, and healing emerges as something ongoing, quiet, and unresolved. In From Mountain, Earth, to Underground Water, Lhamo Yue Liu turns toward inherited cultural forms as living presences, unfolding Tibetan visual and cultural memory through repetition and variation, so that tradition appears not as something preserved, but as something continuously carried forward and reshaped. Here, abstraction becomes a subtle site of reversal, where what is often felt as intangible or peripheral, emotion, spirituality, and inheritance, begins to gather weight within the image. In this way, the works return us to the minor and the overlooked, where quiet, almost imperceptible forces slowly shape the textures of lived experience.
Such are the painterly gestures of the six artists. Their gestures are small, not fully articulated, yet they return with a kind of intimate inevitability: a curl, a loop, a recurrence, a delicate pull of line that feels less like intention than like a habit and thirst of the body. Femininity seeps through these minor rituals. It is a softness that is not weak, but porous; a quiet luxuriance that overflows the strictures of discourse.