"Booth H08"
Nabuqi
Edouard Malingue Gallery
13/F, Blue Box Factory Building, 25 Hing Wo Street, Aberdeen, Hong Kong+852 2810 0317 e-mail:
Frieze London 2022
Regent's Park, London NW1 4HAT : +33 1 53 30 85 20 F : +33 1 53 30 85 25 e-mail:
12 > 16 October

Booth H08
Kiang Malingue is pleased to present for Frieze London a series of new sculptures by Nabuqi (b. 1984, Inner Mongolia, China). Furthering her exploration of the domestic environment, Nabuqi’s new body of works emphasises the tension between the subject and the object, and that between the sculptural and the functional-ornamental as she theatricalises spatial relationships and gives birth to novel forms.
Known for creating meticulously slender, fluid sculptural forms for more than a decade, Nabuqi has become deeply interested in remapping the domestic environment and reconsidering household objects in the last four years. In 2018, Nabuqi devised Do real things happen in moments of rationality? that ushers in the animalistic-locomotive; In 2020, she paid homage to Richard Hamilton and presented How to Be “Good Life”, a spatialisation of a new interiority; In 2021, for her solo exhibition “Ghost, Skin, Dwelling”, she presented a total environment that unequivocally encouraged a reconsideration of life and home today, by placing within an evacuated apartment a miniature fountain, a group of minimal benches, and a number of lamps that resembled archaeological findings.
For Frieze London, Nabuqi assigns new roles to furniture pieces and further theatricalises the relationship between the actors. At the centre of the presentation is No.3-No.7 (Acrylic table, bowl and others), a transparent, circular surface that is occupied by small objects. The hard and soft objects suggest activities that play out around the table, and a particular, eclectic lifestyle that as an organising principle leaves room for random developments and casual sculptural gestures. No.1 (Light box with four birds) revisits the motif of the animal — specifically that of the bird — that frequently appears in many of Nabuqi’s recent works. Combining in yet another novel way a jagged, comb-like light box and repeated images of a bird, the artist continues her inquiry into the inter-activity and reciprocity promised by sculptural and pictorial forms.
In the solo booth, No.8 (Swiss cheese plant in a plate) is the only artwork in bronze, a material Nabuqi favours. It reminds one of the “Fossil” series floor lamps that appear archaeological in the “Ghost, Skin, Dwelling” exhibition, and also of earlier works by the artist that require laborious handling before casting. Lastly, the oddly disproportionate, protruding oval No.2 (Yellow leather sculpture) demonstrates Nabuqi’s interest in reimagining the interior on a materialist level: as the only abstract, non-functional object in this home environment, this soft anti-totem hovers and offers itself up to caress, encapsulating the bodily economy manifest in this theatre where objects act as both props and characters.
Kiang Malingue is pleased to present for Frieze London a series of new sculptures by Nabuqi (b. 1984, Inner Mongolia, China). Furthering her exploration of the domestic environment, Nabuqi’s new body of works emphasises the tension between the subject and the object, and that between the sculptural and the functional-ornamental as she theatricalises spatial relationships and gives birth to novel forms.
Known for creating meticulously slender, fluid sculptural forms for more than a decade, Nabuqi has become deeply interested in remapping the domestic environment and reconsidering household objects in the last four years. In 2018, Nabuqi devised Do real things happen in moments of rationality? that ushers in the animalistic-locomotive; In 2020, she paid homage to Richard Hamilton and presented How to Be “Good Life”, a spatialisation of a new interiority; In 2021, for her solo exhibition “Ghost, Skin, Dwelling”, she presented a total environment that unequivocally encouraged a reconsideration of life and home today, by placing within an evacuated apartment a miniature fountain, a group of minimal benches, and a number of lamps that resembled archaeological findings.
For Frieze London, Nabuqi assigns new roles to furniture pieces and further theatricalises the relationship between the actors. At the centre of the presentation is No.3-No.7 (Acrylic table, bowl and others), a transparent, circular surface that is occupied by small objects. The hard and soft objects suggest activities that play out around the table, and a particular, eclectic lifestyle that as an organising principle leaves room for random developments and casual sculptural gestures. No.1 (Light box with four birds) revisits the motif of the animal — specifically that of the bird — that frequently appears in many of Nabuqi’s recent works. Combining in yet another novel way a jagged, comb-like light box and repeated images of a bird, the artist continues her inquiry into the inter-activity and reciprocity promised by sculptural and pictorial forms.
In the solo booth, No.8 (Swiss cheese plant in a plate) is the only artwork in bronze, a material Nabuqi favours. It reminds one of the “Fossil” series floor lamps that appear archaeological in the “Ghost, Skin, Dwelling” exhibition, and also of earlier works by the artist that require laborious handling before casting. Lastly, the oddly disproportionate, protruding oval No.2 (Yellow leather sculpture) demonstrates Nabuqi’s interest in reimagining the interior on a materialist level: as the only abstract, non-functional object in this home environment, this soft anti-totem hovers and offers itself up to caress, encapsulating the bodily economy manifest in this theatre where objects act as both props and characters.
![]() | Nabuqi | |
mpefm
UNITED KINGDOM art fair press release
Opening hours
Wednesday Preview 12 October: 11am - 7pm (invitation only)
Thursday Preview 13 October > Saturday 15 October: 11am - 7pm
Sunday 16 October: 11am - 6pm
TICKETS
Tickets are only available online in advance and will not be available at the door.
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Opening hours
Wednesday Preview 12 October: 11am - 7pm (invitation only)
Thursday Preview 13 October > Saturday 15 October: 11am - 7pm
Sunday 16 October: 11am - 6pm
TICKETS
| Ticket Types | Early Bird Price | Full Price | Thursday First Preview, 13 October | First Preview | £125 (Sold Out) | £145 | Combined First Preview (both Frieze London and Frieze Masters) | £205 (Sold Out) | £245 | Friday Preview, 14 October | Preview First Access (before 2pm) | £75 (Sold Out) | £90 | Preview | £60 (Sold Out) | £75 | Combined Preview (both Frieze London and Frieze Masters) | £108 (Sold Out) | £128 | Weekend, 15 or 16 October | General Admission First Access (before 2pm) | £46 (Sold Out) | £56 | General Admission | £36 (Sold Out) | £46 | Combined General Admission (both Frieze London and Frieze Masters) | £64 (Sold Out) | £84 | Student/Child (2-17 YEARS) Admission | £26 (Sold Out) | £32 |
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