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Renjie Wang’s paintings open intimate windows into the emotional texture of everyday life, with a focus

on scenes that are often marginalized or sometimes overlooked in our world and state of being.

Her works move between portraiture and urban landscape, between intimate interiors, familiar spaces,

as well as public facades.

Her sustained attention is often directed to the people she paints—

depicting their emotional, psychological states, engaging their presence and self-assertion within their relationships, as well as their habitual and social structures.

At the same time, these interwoven moments and situations unfold traces of life. Sometimes subtle, sometimes more outspoken, questions of belonging and identity are posed, while traces of autobiographical experiences and collective memories are uncovered.

Between resonating feelings, open conversations, and observations, she grounds her

paintings on the foundation of digital references and photography, which she intuitively captures in her

everyday life.

What emerges is a body of work that invites reflection—on the transience and depth of human relationships, as well as the shared existence of our lived present. 

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