NEW YORK, NY.- Alisan Fine Arts will present two solo exhibitions at the New York City location opening January 15th, 2026: Chiang Yomei, Moon on the Water, and Cui Fei, Vermicular Calligraphy. Both exhibitions will run through March 7, 2026.
Cui Fei: Vermicular Calligraphy
Born in Jinan, Cui Fei studied at both the China Academy of Fine Arts and Indiana University of Pennsylvania, where she received her MFA. Based in New York since 1996, she has exhibited extensively across the globe, and is best known for her artworks that use natural materials such as thorns, vines and seeds
Vermicular Calligraphy will debut a new body of work by the artist, one that she has been developing for several years. According to the artist,
This series is a further exploration of the asemic writing found in nature. While out collecting plant materials, I was intrigued by the markings carved by beetles on tree trunks and how much some of these patterns resemble Chinese calligraphy. Through my research, I discovered that bark beetles have long been part of the ecosystem. They attack weak or sick trees to make room for new growth. Unfortunately, climate change has turned this natural process into a man-made disaster.
The discovery led to a new body of work by Cui, in which she uses ink rubbings to capture the patterns carved by the bark beetles, and later transfers them into lead sculptures that she calls Sheaths. This exhibition focuses on the ink rubbings, the first part of her process, which has resulted in paper relief artworks. The paper rubbings take on a three-dimensional form in essence, they are delicate molds of the tree trunks where bark beetles left their natural markings. Mimicking the path of the beetles, Cui has also created an installation for the exhibition, with fragments of bark that horizontally traverse one wall of the gallery. As always, she brings the natural world into dialogue with human culture. Language and writingsymbols imbued with meaningform the basis of human society, and Cui finds parallels to writing systems throughout the natural world. (?) Through her work, she reminds us of the delicate balance between humans and nature.
Through the ink rubbings, I trace "writing" back to its originnature, emphasizing its importance to our civilization. These works serve as a metaphor that transformative changes are urgently needed for a sustainable future. ~ Cui Fei, 2025
Chiang Yomei: Moon on the Water
"So I say this to you~ this is how to contemplate our conditioned existence in this fleeting world: Like a drop of dew, or a bubble in a stream; like a flash of lightning in a summer cloud, or a flickering lamp, an illusion, a phantom, or a dream. So is all conditioned existence to be seen. Thus spoke Buddha." ~The Diamond Sutra
Moon on the Water is Chiang Yomeis first solo exhibition in the US. Born in Taiwan and based in London since 1981, Yomei is a multidisciplinary artist whose work is deeply influenced by the philosophy and psychology behind Buddhist thought. We will feature two ongoing bodies of work by the artist: her "Lotus" and "Waking Dream" series.
Yomeis Waking Dream series centers on a circular moon-like form, repeated and sometimes elongated and fragmented, painted using acrylic on canvas. According to the artist, Because all compounded phenomena are conditioned and eventually fall apart, nothing has a solid, unchanging existence. So everything is really an illusion: like an image in the mirror, a moon on the water. The moon on the water' is a meditation on impermanence.
The circular form has many meanings in Buddhist thought: it represents non-duality; a constant flow of energy, and is symbolic of the cyclical, creative and infinite nature of the universe and of life. To Yomei, her circles emphasize that phenomena are neither created nor destroyed (不生不滅). That all things are interdependent and do not have an independent existence, being empty in nature. Her work Unborn and Unceasing embodies this philosophy, with its vibrant, undulating red surface painted using sand, incense ash & oil on canvas.
Alongside her works on canvas is a selection of works on paper from her Lotus series. Here, she uses traditional Chinese ink, sea salt, pencil & acrylic. Spontaneity and uncertainty are key elements to her artistic approach; she embraces the idea of chance and impermanence, much like Dadaists did in the mid-20th century, who were also influenced by Buddhist philosophy.
In Buddhism, the Lotus symbolises purity, enlightenment and non-attachment. The Lotus plant roots in mud (symbolizing attachment); its bloom above the water represents non-attachment.
The Lotus represents the journey towards enlightenment, from root to bloom, a metaphor for different stages of development. For me, the whole lotus represents the practitioner, the path. The works "Story of the Lotus" and "Dream of the Lotus" express my own process as a practitioner through ink and brush, a meditation on impermanence. ~ Chiang Yomei, 2025
Chiang Yomei is an artist, poet, and devout Buddhist who integrates philosophy, psychology, and Buddhist thought into her multidisciplinary works, which include painting, drawing, poetry, and installations. Born to a Chinese-Russian father and a Chinese-German mother, she received classical training in Chinese landscape painting and literature in Taiwan before studying art and literature in the US, Germany, and the UK. She holds degrees from the University of Kent and Winchester School of Art, with further studies at SOAS, University of London.
Chiangs art reflects her meditations on nature, philosophy, and cognitive psychology, embodying a deeply intellectual and spiritual approach. Her works are found in private and public collections across Europe and Asia, including Ariane de Rothschild Foundation, Switzerland and several institutions in Taiwan, such as Fubon Cultural and Educational Foundation, Yuanta Development, National Performing Arts Centre, Foundation of Harmony Social Welfare, and Cheng Ching Hospital.
Cui Fei was born in Jinan, China. She received her MFA in painting at Indiana University of Pennsylvania, and her BFA degree from the China Academy of Fine Arts. Her work has been exhibited nationally and internationally at venues such as the Museum of Arts and Design, New York, NY; Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton, NJ; Museum of Chinese in America, NY; Queens Museum, NY; Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield, CT; Delaware Art Museum, Wilmington, DE; Art Complex Museum, Duxbury, MA; New Britain Museum of American Art, New Britain, CT; Chelsea Art Museum, NY; Wave Hill, Bronx, NY; and Bronx Museum of Arts; Kunstgewerbe Museum, Dresden, Germany; Jeju Museum of Art, Korea, Jeju, Korea; Power Station of Art, Shanghai, China; Museum Rietberg, Switzerland; and Museum of East Asian Art in Cologne, Germany, among others.
Cui is a recipient of the Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant, the Artists Fellowship from the New York Foundation for the Arts, the Annual Fellowship from Socrates Sculpture Park, the SIP fellowship from the Robert Blackburn Printmaking Workshop, the Artist-in-Residence Workspace Grant from The Center for Book Arts, and the Excellence in Arts Award from the Bronx Council on the Arts. She was selected for the Art Omi International Artists Residency, the Artist-in-Residence Program at Light Work, the Emerge Program, Aljira & Creative Capital, Newark, and the AIM program at the Bronx Museum of the Arts. Her work has been reviewed in The New York Times, Art in America, and YiShuJournal of Contemporary Chinese Art, among other publications.
Cui's work is included in the permanent collections of the Brooklyn Museum, Harvard Art Museums, Princeton University Art Museum, the Tang Center for East Asian Art at Princeton University, RISD Museum, Light Work at Syracuse University, and Stony Brook University.