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THE LIMIT IS THE TURBULENT SKIES

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2025 Group Exhibition
Duration | 2025. Aug. 29 ~ Nov. 02. 

​Location | MoNTUE, Taipei

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Curators | Nn̄g Project CHANG Wen-Hao、HUANG Yi-Hsuan、Danson WONG
Artists | CHANG Ting-Chen、Florence Yuk Ki LEE、HONG Jin-Hwon、LI Bing-Ao、LIN Yan-Xiang、LO Yi-Chun、Natalie Lai Lai LO、Sean TSENG、TSUI Hou-Lam

Organizer | Museum of National Taipei University of Education (MoNTUE)、National Culture and Arts Foundation Curators’ Incubator Program @ Museum
Sponsor | Spring Foundation
Supporting Partners | Taiwan Contemporary Culture Lab、Glitch
Media Partners | ARTouch.com、Art Emperor、Art Command Center
​Catering Partner | Crew's Dessert

Special Thanks | Mark WANG、WU Tzu-A

This exhibition reframes the once-hopeful slogan on its head: “The limit’s the skies.” Rather than a realm of boundless possibility, the skies have become a site of contradiction. Beneath the rhetoric of freedom and globalization lie conflicting realities, including the algorithmic governance, the ambivalence of migration and belonging, the commodification of travel, and the extractive infrastructures that sustain global circulation. These forces, acting together like turbulence, disturb our perception of the world and expose fissures in the ways we are conditioned to look. As emotion, memory, and the body are swept up in these accelerated conditions, turbulence comes to mean more than merely disruptions in air travel. It is the very condition of contemporary life: disoriented structures, blurred borders, and overstimulated senses that prompt us to rethink how we inhabit and connect with the world around us.


The airport, a familiar yet often overlooked site, serves as a conceptual anchor of the exhibition. It is a place of transit, surveillance, and delay, shaped by anticipation, regulation, and constant movement. As both a nexus of global connection and a site where the contradictions of our time are laid bare, the airport offers a lens through which we can resense and re-measure the world. In this exhibition, nine artists from Taiwan, Hong Kong, and South Korea engage with this condition of “turbulence” from different perspectives.

Video installation

Dimensions variable, site-specific

Photo: (1) Artist CHANG Ting-Chen; (2) dulub studio; Courtesy of MoNTUE.

“Blessings Are the Tail of Affliction” series began with a personal experience of the artist: on her birthday one year, she received a cheerful video greeting from a group of performers in Africa. Between the unfamiliar language and their exuberant smiles, the footage stirred a sense of unease—prompting her to question the global circulation of emotions. Was this blessing a sincere gift offered personally, or a commodified sentiment shaped by collective cultural consumption? What forms of unseen labor, technological structures, and cultural asymmetries underlie such affective exchanges?

This moment became the starting point for a broader inquiry into what she calls a “misaligned trajectory of blessings”—a path where technological aspiration, emotional resonance, and symbolic exchange converge. Through this series, she examines how emotions and language become distorted, translated, or consumed in their cross-border circulation, revealing the deeper dissonances that underlie the illusion of smooth exchange.

Sound installation
Dimensions variable, 4 pieces in total

Photo: (1-3) dulub studio; Courtesy of MoNTUE; (4) Artist CHANG Ting-Chen

Digital print
53×77, 6 pieces in total

Photo: Artist CHANGTing-Chen

Blessings Are The Tail Of Affliction series | A Silent Party Loop

Found objects, Single-channel video installation (looped)

Dimensions variable, site-specific

Photo: (1-2) dulub studio; Courtesy of MoNTUE; (3-4) Artist CHANG Ting-Chen

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