Carrying Memories of the Past and the Passage of Time: Revisiting Childhood Through Images
"Childhood, Sculpted" Chen Yung Hua Exhibition
"Childhood, Sculpted" Chen Yung Hua 2

Time is an Invisible Sculptor

"Childhood, Sculpted" is inspired by photographer Chen Yonghua's profound reflections on time and memory.

"Sculpting" represents removal and retention, while "shaping" represents creation and shaping. Time is like an invisible sculptor, constantly changing people's appearances, personalities, and emotions, as well as spaces, architecture, and the objects we cherish," she explains the origin of the exhibition title.

The exhibition primarily focuses on her childhood moment spent at her grandparents' house in Yilan: searching for insects with her old sister near the grain pile, secretly opening her grandmother's makeup box, and lying in the yard counting clouds at the boundless sky. Those seemingly ordinary daily routines profoundly shaped her way of seeing the world.

Years after her grandparents passed away, Chen Yonghua returned to that uninhabited old house.

"The cracks in the walls, the broken furniture, and the cobwebs covering the corners—many once-familiar corners bear the marks of time. Yet, it is precisely these changes that make me deeply feel the presence of time."