⧜ (the mathematical sign for incomplete infinity) proposes an interplay between fullness and void, continuity and interruption, which appeals to transit states. The Kriska aluminum curtains, originally used in the south of Catalunya where the artist spent his childhood, are light and brightly colored, and they make a characteristic metallic sound when you walk through them. The cutout holes in the curtains came from a catalogue of forms that invite the imagination to recognize them but resist any clear interpretation. The public can either go through these openings or traverse the curtains.
For the Taipei Biennial, the curtains pretend to dissolve in the host architecture, while still offering a sharp and subtle contrast to its imposing geometry. The curtains divide the space into different sections, creating a space that dematerializes as the visitors move through it, thereby making the transient the essence of the work. As the artist describes them “these curtains form environments of different pressures as visitors exit the exhibition”