Poster image of 《Witches》 © space illi

《Witches》 summons the figure of the “witch” from myth, legend, and history as the name of the other. They are imagined as malevolent beings who cast curses upon their oppressors, creatures who traverse the night sky, worship the devil, and devour the hollow myth of motherhood.

At the same time, they emerge as powerful symbols of resistance—beings who, through their connection to nature, possess fearsome power and forbidden knowledge; autonomous in themselves, yet capable of forming solidarities through their own agency. This exhibition calls forth those who stand at the margins beyond the bounds of normalcy—feminine subjects exiled outside the structures of social norms and order.

Installation view of 《Witches》 © space illi

Witches appear both as entities summoned from the past and as signs that reveal the alienation and lack of the present moment. Rising after crossing the river of oblivion, they break free from the constraints of anonymity and call one another by new names. They encounter bodies resurrected from the sediments of fragmented memory and emotion.

Through the language of witches drifting along the threshold, the exhibition poses a question: here, in this strange and nameless land, whose return are we awaiting? In what narrative, in what body, in what voice might it arrive?

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