13/05/2026
Yau Bee Ling is well known for her vibrant, expressive works centred on the subject of family and human relationships. Her practice is defined by a distinctive oil paint process of layering on and scraping back, building surfaces of accumulated density that have become a signature of her work. Over the years, Bee Ling has remained steadfastly committed to the development of her artistic journey, and this exhibition presents one significant aspect of the many important phases her practice has moved through.
Her first solo exhibition with the gallery in 2008, titled ‘Portraits of Paradox’, revealed a new level of maturity in the way Bee Ling approached her work, a shift tied in part to the changes she experienced on a personal level. In 2006, she became a mother for the first time, navigating life as an artist, wife, and mother simultaneously.’ Portraits of Paradox’ grew from this period, revolving around her struggle with the superficiality of human relationships and communication, in which sincerity and honesty had become increasingly elusive.
The paintings were multi-layered in more ways than one. The portraits depicted people in the manner of a photograph, composed and at ease with one another on the surface, while beneath that composed facade lay an entanglement of unresolved tensions, deceit, and jealousy. In her efforts to avoid co-existing within this hypocritical social grouping, Bee Ling found herself isolated; yet when caught within it, she felt bound and claustrophobic. These two states, exclusion and entrapment, became the emotional axis around which the series turned.
This body of work sought to give form to feelings and thoughts that resisted ordinary communication. Where words failed or were unwelcome, the paintings became the space through which Bee Ling's voice could be heard, candidly and on her own terms.
Image 1: Arbitrary Ruler I (2008) | Oil on canvas; 183cm x 138cm
Image 2: Arbitrary Ruler II (2008) | Oil on canvas; 183cm x 138cm
Image 3,4: Mass Gathering (2008) | Oil on canvas; 168cm x 214cm
Image 5: “Untitled (Woman Study)” (2008) | Oil on canvas; 92cm x 92cm