The Fissure of Perception: Li Manjin, Meng Yangyang, Misha

Beijing

2026.01.10 - 03.07

Exhibition Article - The Fissure of Perception

In the philosophy of perception, the world does not present itself to us as a complete whole; it unfolds at the very moment perception is activated. Merleau-Ponty's notion of "the becoming of vision" points to an unstable, in-between state, of instability, in which the subject has not yet reached the object, and the object has not yet solidified into a definable image. Painting often emerges at this threshold— a moment when consciousness, the body, and lived experience are caught in transition, still fluid and unsettled, as if opening a brief fissure on the canvas through which the world and perception reach toward, and into, each other. This exhibition takes that generative zone as its point of departure and situates the practices of Li Manjin, Meng Yangyang, and Misha within a shared conceptual framework. Their works do not construct external scenes but probe into perception itself, allowing the glimmer of consciousness, the posture of the body, and the sedimentation of experience to surface through pictorial relations. The exhibition raises a single question: when painting withdraws from the task of representation, how does the world reveal itself in the space before form takes hold?

LI MANJIN

In Li Manjin’s work, images are not shaped through predetermined contours but emerge through veiling, dragging, and repeated gestures. Her brushwork does not aim at a fixed object but records the slight shifts of consciousness: lines converge and disperse; color blocks accumulate into structures that remain unresolved. The canvas thus presents itself as a site of formation, marked by the traces of a mind searching for coherence. Viewers sense a slow, persistent unfolding of time within these unstable relations, in which movement itself becomes the core of the image. Her works carry a sedimentary quality: perception appears through continual revision, and the extension of thought is held in suspension across the surface.

Fruits No.13

2025
Acrylic on canvas
60.0 × 80.0 cm

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Fruits No.5

2025
Acrylic on canvas
60.0 × 80.0 cm

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Fruits No.2

2025
Acrylic on canvas
120.0 × 150.0 cm

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Fruits No.3

2024
Acrylic on canvas
100.0 × 120.0 cm

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Fruits No.15

2025
Acrylic on canvas
200.0 × 250.0 cm

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Longing to Fly No.14

2024
Acrylic on canvas
100.0 × 160.0 cm

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Longing to Fly No.16

2025
Acrylic on canvas
120.0 × 150.0 cm

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Tender Green No.2

2023
Acrylic on canvas
150.0 × 120.0 cm

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Tender Green No.4

2023
Acrylic on canvas
180.0 × 210.0 cm

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Tender Green No.9

2025
Acrylic on canvas
180.0 × 210.0 cm

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Tender Green No.10

2025
Acrylic on canvas
80.0 × 100.0 cm

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Fruits No.13

2025
Acrylic on canvas
60.0 × 80.0 cm

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Fruits No.5

2025
Acrylic on canvas
60.0 × 80.0 cm

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Fruits No.2

2025
Acrylic on canvas
120.0 × 150.0 cm

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Fruits No.3

2024
Acrylic on canvas
100.0 × 120.0 cm

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Fruits No.15

2025
Acrylic on canvas
200.0 × 250.0 cm

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Longing to Fly No.14

2024
Acrylic on canvas
100.0 × 160.0 cm

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Longing to Fly No.16

2025
Acrylic on canvas
120.0 × 150.0 cm

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Tender Green No.2

2023
Acrylic on canvas
150.0 × 120.0 cm

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Tender Green No.4

2023
Acrylic on canvas
180.0 × 210.0 cm

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Tender Green No.9

2025
Acrylic on canvas
180.0 × 210.0 cm

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Tender Green No.10

2025
Acrylic on canvas
80.0 × 100.0 cm

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Fruits No.13
Fruits No.5
Fruits No.2
Fruits No.3
Fruits No.15
Longing to Fly No.14
Longing to Fly No.16
Tender Green No.2
Tender Green No.4
Tender Green No.9
Tender Green No.10

ABOUT

LI MANJIN

Li Manjin was born in Fujian in 1981 and lives in Beijing. 
Graduated in 2005 from Oil Painting Major of Fujian Normal University. Her works were exhibited in Beijing Shang Xia Fu Space,Horizon art space, One Way Art,  Joy Art Space, Singapore Y2ARTS Showroom etc. She also participated in group exhibitions organized by Macau Museum of Art, Art Gallery of California State University, Times Museum, Songzhuang Art Museum ,Beijing World Art Museum, UCCA Lab and KWM artcenter and etc.

MENG YANGYANG

If Li Manjin reveals the generative motion of consciousness, Meng Yangyang turns toward the conditions that make seeing possible. Her paintings are perceived first as “points of entry into viewing” rather than narrative subjects. The body is broken into faint cues—a muted tone, a contour that never fully emerges, or a blank space that gently displaces form. The figures seem not yet ready to appear, maintaining a measured distance that shifts attention from identifying the subject to sensing how it comes into view. Visual focus cannot settle on a single point; it is redistributed across fragments, pauses, and intervals. Light, airy color and thinned spatial arrangements heighten this instability, positioning the body not as a carrier of meaning but as a mediator that reorganizes how viewing takes place. Meaning arises not from the depicted object but from the reconfiguration of perception itself.

A Pipe Dream

2023
Oil on canvas
150.0 × 100.0 cm

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A Romantic and Melancholic Story

2025
Oil on canvas
120.0 × 100.0 cm

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Shanghai Story

2024
Oil on canvas
120.0 × 90.0 cm

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Me and the People I have Met

2025
Oil on canvas
115.0 × 175.0 cm

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Little Story Series

2025
Oil on canvas
27.0 × 37.0 cm

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Little Story Series

2025
Oil on canvas
39.0 × 26.0 cm

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Little Story Series

2025
Oil on canvas
41.0 × 24.0 cm

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Little Story Series

2025
Oil on canvas
39.0 × 26.0 cm

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Little Story Series

2025
Oil on canvas
38.0 × 33.0 cm

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Little Story Series

2025
Oil on canvas
40.0 × 33.0 cm

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Little Story Series

2025
Oil on canvas
40.0 × 34.0 cm

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Little Story Series

2025
Oil on canvas
42.0 × 37.0 cm

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Little Story Series

2025
Oil on canvas
42.0 × 38.0 cm

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Little Story Series

2025
Oil on canvas
40.0 × 38.0 cm

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A Pipe Dream

2023
Oil on canvas
150.0 × 100.0 cm

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A Romantic and Melancholic Story

2025
Oil on canvas
120.0 × 100.0 cm

More Info

Shanghai Story

2024
Oil on canvas
120.0 × 90.0 cm

More Info

Me and the People I have Met

2025
Oil on canvas
115.0 × 175.0 cm

More Info

Little Story Series

2025
Oil on canvas
27.0 × 37.0 cm

More Info

Little Story Series

2025
Oil on canvas
39.0 × 26.0 cm

More Info

Little Story Series

2025
Oil on canvas
41.0 × 24.0 cm

More Info

Little Story Series

2025
Oil on canvas
39.0 × 26.0 cm

More Info

Little Story Series

2025
Oil on canvas
38.0 × 33.0 cm

More Info

Little Story Series

2025
Oil on canvas
40.0 × 33.0 cm

More Info

Little Story Series

2025
Oil on canvas
40.0 × 34.0 cm

More Info

Little Story Series

2025
Oil on canvas
42.0 × 37.0 cm

More Info

Little Story Series

2025
Oil on canvas
42.0 × 38.0 cm

More Info

Little Story Series

2025
Oil on canvas
40.0 × 38.0 cm

More Info

A Pipe Dream
A Romantic and Melancholic Story
Shanghai Story
Me and the People I have Met
How Can One Piece Together the Fragments of Memory into a Novel
Little Story Series
Little Story Series
Little Story Series
Little Story Series
Little Story Series
Little Story Series
Little Story Series
Little Story Series
Little Story Series
Little Story Series

ABOUT

MENG YANGYANG

1983
Born in Chongqing,China

2006    B.A,  Oil Painting Department of Sichuan Fine Arts Institute, Chongqing, China
2009 M.A, Oil Painting Department of Sichuan Fine Arts Institute , Chongqing, China

Currently lives and works in Shanghai,China

MISHA

In Misha’s paintings, color functions as the primary vessel of experience, creating a structure akin to perceptual strata. The movement of color, variations in luminance, and subtle spatial tilts point not to external scenery but to the ways memory takes shape within the body. Her palette carries both the specificity of place and the rhythm of psychological states, giving the image a sense of temperature and direction. Color is no longer a compositional tool but a means through which experience is reorganized. The paintings possess a quality of return: the weight of lived experience is delayed, preserved, and reactivated through the accumulation of hues.

Fragrant Aura No.4

2020
Acrylic on panel
80.0 × 80.0 cm

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Fragrant Aura No.3

2020
Acrylic on panel
80.0 × 80.0 cm

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Glimmer in the Folds No.2

2024
Acrylic and oil pastel on canvas
80.0 × 80.0 cm

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Margin

2024
Acrylic and oil pastel on panel
80.0 × 80.0 cm

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Starburst in the Mist

2025
Acrylic and oil pastel on canvas
140.0 × 160.0 cm

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Stardust Between Petals No.1

2025
Acrylic and oil pastel on canvas
140.0 × 160.0 cm

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Fragrant Aura No.4

2020
Acrylic on panel
80.0 × 80.0 cm

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Fragrant Aura No.3

2020
Acrylic on panel
80.0 × 80.0 cm

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Glimmer in the Folds No.2

2024
Acrylic and oil pastel on canvas
80.0 × 80.0 cm

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Margin

2024
Acrylic and oil pastel on panel
80.0 × 80.0 cm

More Info

Starburst in the Mist

2025
Acrylic and oil pastel on canvas
140.0 × 160.0 cm

More Info

Stardust Between Petals No.1

2025
Acrylic and oil pastel on canvas
140.0 × 160.0 cm

More Info

Fragrant Aura No.4
Fragrant Aura No.3
Glimmer in the Folds No.2
Margin
Starburst in the Mist
Stardust Between Petals No.1

ABOUT

MISHA

Born in 1991 in Aksu, Xinjiang, currently lives and works in Beijing.

Education
2011–2015
Bachelor of Fine Arts, Xinjiang Normal University
2017–2020
Master of Fine Arts, Oil Painting Department, Central Academy of Fine Arts

Selected Exhibitions
2025
Grass Grows, Eagles Fly, Upspace, Group Exhibition, Beijing
2021
Hi Art Center, Beijing
2020
International Biennial of Women Artists, Macau
2019
Shanghai Young Art Fair, Shanghai Exhibition Center
Fearless, Youth Artists Group Exhibition, Yilecheng Art Space, Beijing
New Generation, Graduate Works Exhibition, Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing
2018
Art Assembly 2018, Hui Space, Beijing

While the three artists employ distinct visual vocabularies, their works converge on a shared structural premise: the image does not arrive with a pre-determined form but gains visibility through shifting relations. It is within this dynamic interface that the fissure emerges—not as rupture, but as a space that allows the image to be delayed, diverted, and reassembled, allowing appearance to take place. In this structure, viewing becomes less an act of confirming what is seen and more an attunement to how the image comes into being. The image itself never arrives in full clarity; it inhabits a zone of half-light, coexisting with the viewer. The Fissure of Perception thus points not to a theme but to an ontological tension: the world forms quietly in what has not yet been said, and it is within this subtle interval that the viewer reencounters both the world and themselves.

The Fissure of Perception: Li Manjin, Meng Yangyang, Misha 2026.01.10 - 03.07

BEIJING

Sevenstar Street (E.), 798 Art District, No.4 Jiuxianqiao Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing 100015, China
Tel: +86 10 59920796
Opening Hours: 11:00 - 18:00
Closed: 日曜、月曜
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