In an age saturated with sharp images, fast content, and instant appeal, Wanting Wang — a visual artist located in London—invites us to slow down. Her work is not concerned with spectacle, but with perception: not just what we see, but how we see, and what might lie just beyond the edges of clarity.
Born out of a desire to capture the fleeting, Wanting’s early works revealed a strong eye for composition and a deep sensitivity to light and shadow. But over time, her practice began to evolve from storytelling into something more philosophical, more porous. Her ongoing project, The Boundary Between, marks a significant moment in this transition—a quiet yet powerful exploration of blurred thresholds between land and sea, human and nonhuman, presence and absence.
This body of work was recently featured at the Agaphe Gallery in Spain, as part of the group exhibition THE ORDER OF CHAOS (10th April — 24th April 2025). The series, captured over the course of a period while living in Florida, focuses on misty coastlines where people dissolve into fog and migratory birds etch momentary gestures into the sky. Rather than capturing scenes in crisp detail, Wanting allows her subjects—landscapes, birds, beachgoers—to fade into one another, creating images where boundaries are softened, and perception itself becomes a shifting terrain.
What stands out most in Wanting’s work is its refusal to dictate meaning. The images don’t demand immediate interpretation; instead, they invite introspection. Shot exclusively in black and white, and often framed from a distance using a telephoto lens, the photographs emphasize haziness over clarity. High humidity, overcast skies, and liminal light—dawn and dusk—are not just conditions, but collaborators. The result is a delicate visual fog that hovers between abstraction and figuration, allowing viewers to engage with uncertainty as part of the experience.
This uncertainty is precisely the point. Wanting is less interested in depicting the world as it is, and more curious about how we construct our understanding of it. In these photographs, people do not dominate the frame—they are absorbed into their surroundings, becoming part of a broader ecological choreography. Birds no longer serve as background details, but as flowing symbols of transience. The coastline becomes not a dividing line, but a metaphor for perception itself: ever-shifting, never fixed.
While the current iteration of The Boundary Between exists as a photographic series, Wanting sees this as only the beginning. She is deeply aware of what she calls the “crisis of visual overload” in the contemporary art world, where artworks are often pressured to be bold, immediate, and instantly legible. In response, she plans to expand this project into a cross-disciplinary exploration involving video, sound, and spatial installation. By collaborating with choreographers, sound artists, and even scientists, Wanting hopes to build immersive experiences that shift “viewing” into something more embodied—where we don’t just look, but feel, listen, and move.
At its heart, Wanting Wang’s work challenges the notion that clarity equals truth. Her soft, blurred images resist easy consumption and remind us that not all things need to be sharply defined to be deeply understood. In her world, the mist is not something to be feared or cleared away—it is the space where perception opens, boundaries loosen, and something quietly profound begins to take shape.