Life, Decay, and Cycles in Material Form

This week’s visit to the Corpse Flower Pop-Up exhibition offered a visceral and materially rich exploration of life, death, decay, and regeneration. The Amorphophallus titanum—renowned for its stench of rot—served as a potent curatorial metaphor: alluring, grotesque, and transitory. This sensorial tension between attraction and repulsion opened a pathway for thinking about time and transformation beyond linear narratives.

Analysis of some works

Jiayi Huang, The Last Harvest, 2025 Lootan. aluminum. soi. syruo

The work’s geometric, hollow forms evoke a sense of organic growth and fragility, which contrasts with the solidity of the soil, underscoring the cyclical interplay of death and rebirth.
The inclusion of flies—agents of decay—alludes to the corpse flower’s scent and symbolises time as a slow, erosive force. Here, decomposition is not portrayed as an end, but as a fertile process of temporal transformation.

Shencheng Wang, Breathing between Lips and Teeth, 2025, Clay, glaze, soil, pine tree branches, pinecone.

Through its form, materials, and symbolic elements, the work simulates an oral ecosystem, examining the intricate interplay between bacteria, food, decay, and regeneration.
By integrating soil and living plants, it expands this exploration beyond the microscopic, inviting the audience to reflect on the parallels between nature and the human body, decomposition and renewal, and the cyclical processes of life on both macro and micro scales.

Wenke Xu, Illusory Puzzle 2025, Ultra-light clay, Resin, Acrylic paint, Artificial grass

Colorful, mushroom-shaped sculptures, adorned with moss, are accompanied by interactive signage that encourages visitors to engage with the installation. By rearranging light sources and objects, they can explore dynamic shifts in light and shadow, thereby deepening their sensory and spatial perception.

Curatorial Reflections: Slow Time, Living Systems

The Corpse Flower exhibition reshaped my understanding of time—not as linear, but as tactile, relational, and ecological. Its use of organic metaphors, such as spores and decay, revealed temporality as a circulating force rather than an endpoint.

I was particularly struck by how the spatial design choreographed slowness, prompting visitors to linger and engage sensorially.
Inspired by this, I’m considering how my own exhibition can guide the audience’s rhythm—through dim lighting, ambient sound, and touchable elements—to resist extractive viewing and cultivate an experience of embodied, ethical witnessing.