Waddington Custot debuts Jiang Qiong Er's Guardians of Time, bridging myth and modernity
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, November 9, 2025


Waddington Custot debuts Jiang Qiong Er's Guardians of Time, bridging myth and modernity
At the centre of the exhibition is ‘XII Calls’, a bronze installation inspired by mythical creatures from ancient civilisations.



LONDON.- Waddington Custot is presenting 'Guardians of Time', the first UK exhibition by acclaimed Chinese artist and designer, Jiang Qiong Er. Known internationally for bridging traditional Chinese craftsmanship with contemporary design, Qiong Er presents a series of sculptural installations, wax paintings and design objects that reimagine ancient Chinese mythology and cultural symbols through 21st century motifs. Through this, the artist offers a meditation on time, renewal and cultural memory. Her works draw on centuries-old narratives while asking urgent questions about cultural preservation and transformation.

At the centre of the exhibition is ‘XII Calls’, a bronze installation inspired by mythical creatures from ancient civilisations. Each figure embodies a universal value: Bravery, Wisdom, Equality, Nature, Fraternity, Exploration, Time, Inclusion, Benevolence, Authenticity, Peace and Freedom. These hybrid, syncretic beings form a contemporary bestiary addressing urgent questions about cultural preservation in a rapidly evolving world.

First unveiled on the façade of the Guimet Museum in Paris in 2024, one set of ‘XII Calls’ has since been acquired for UNESCO’s permanent collection, displayed at the organisation’s Paris headquarters alongside Alberto Giacometti’s ‘Walking Man’, testament to the enduring, universal values represented by Qiong Er’s designs. The acquisition reflects Qiong Er’s inclusion in other prestigious permanent collections worldwide, such as the Victoria and Albert Museum and the British Museum. As Qiong Er explains:

“Art is a gentle form of cultural dialogue. It transcends borders and ideologies, reconnecting people through emotion and symbolism… It can be heard by the world without having to be translated.”

In ‘XII Calls – Wax Paintings’, a series debuting in London, Qiong Er extends her exploration of time and transformation into wax for the first time. Each work begins as a charcoal drawing, transferred to a silicone plate and overlaid with molten wax at around 80 °C, repeated dozens or even hundreds of times. Through this accretive process, the image is absorbed, inverted and embedded within the wax; this white expanse becomes the artist’s ‘paper.’ For Qiong Er, wax is both medium and metaphor: a substance capable of solidifying and melting, moving backward and forward, holding time in suspension. In these works, memories and emotions are not fixed to a surface but preserved within a luminous, tactile depth, where image and temporality converge.

Another highlight is ‘Her Voice’, a powerful installation dedicated to Nüshu, an endangered women’s script of Hunan province. Translating literally as ‘women’s script’, Nüshu was the only writing system in the world created and used exclusively by women, offering them a secret mode of communication in a patriarchal society. Taking impetus from this powerful symbol of bravery, the work takes inspiration from other Chinese, calligraphic methods – a cursive calligraphy that symbolised freedom, the power of authenticity from ‘Oracle Bone Script’, and the beauty and core strength from ‘Seal Script’ – Qiong Er creates a 21st-Century Nüshu. By integrating its flowing characters into cabinets, Qiong Er reclaims and amplifies a tradition once hidden from public view. Subtly tilted shelves within the cabinetry challenge conventional design, continuing the script’s tradition of coded resilience and communication.

Qiong Er’s unique ability to fuse heritage with modern innovation is perhaps most famously embodied in SHANG XIA, the luxury design brand she co-founded in 2010 with Hermès. SHANG XIA has become synonymous with contemporary Chinese craftsmanship on a global stage, known for its futuristic textures, classically tailored silhouettes and daring details. Like SHANG XIA, ‘Guardians of Time' demonstrates Qiong Er’s conviction that tradition and modernity can be reconciled.

In works such as ‘Whispering Cloud’, a display of bamboo marquetry panels, screens and tables, Qiong Er revives a craft first prized by China’s literati and introduced to the imperial palace during the Qing Dynasty. This intricate process begins with the careful winter selection of mature bamboo, followed by precise cutting into thin strips and the masterful notching that transforms them into relief designs of classical elegance. These materials, transformed by centuries-old skills and contemporary imagination, are central to the spirit of ‘Guardians of Time'.

In ‘Guardians of Time', Qiong Er reminds audiences that ancient symbols and forgotten scripts are not static relics but evolving languages. Her design practice offers a powerful cultural dialogue that “transcends borders and ideologies, reconnecting people through emotion and symbolism”.










Today's News

November 9, 2025

'Fluxuriös!' at Dresden's Archive of the Avant-Garde celebrates the radical spirit of Fluxus

David Zwirner celebrates Joan Mitchell's centennial with rare works from 1960-1965

Pace Gallery celebrates 65 years with Agnes Martin's radiant Innocent Love series in New York

Christie's New York presents property sold to benefit the Clooney Foundation for Justice

Hauser & Wirth Los Angeles debuts Flora Yukhnovich's sensual and explosive 'Bacchanalia'

Sotheby's to auction rare wines from the private cellar of Jörg G. Bucherer

Ephemeral architecture and memory collide in Carlos Bunga's largest installation to date

The last Gordon Murray S1 LM remaining for sale to be auctioned at amfAR's Las Vegas benefit gala

Kin Museum revisits a landmark 1965 exhibition

James Cohan unveils Eamon Ore-Giron's vibrant fusion of myth, abstraction, and ancestral memory

EMST Athens revisits Greece's cultural past and future in The Greek Month in London 1975 and Sea Garden

timo fahler transforms found objects into mythic symbols of loss and renewal at Sebastian Gladstone

Janaina Tschäpe's dreamlike abstractions fill Galerie Max Hetzler with fluid color and memory

Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst announces annual programme 2026

Channa Horwitz's visual systems come to life in 'Evolving Systems' at François Ghebaly

Ben Sakoguchi takes a swing at U.S. culture in Chin Music

Abraham González Pacheco debuts in Brazil with Machintla, La Sombra Eléctrica de Las Cosas

The National Gallery reexamines Wright of Derby as a painter of night, not just light

Waddington Custot debuts Jiang Qiong Er's Guardians of Time, bridging myth and modernity

Nifemi Marcus-Bello's first solo exhibition in Lagos opens

Sybren Hellinga Keunstpriis 2025: Emerging artists explore violence, vulnerability, and imagination




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



The OnlineCasinosSpelen editors have years of experience with everything related to online gambling providers and reliable online casinos Nederland. If you have any questions about casino bonuses and, please contact the team directly.


Truck Accident Attorneys

sports betting sites not on GamStop



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)


Editor: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez


Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
       
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful