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Young artist challenges the idea of metal

Updated: 2026-05-25 06:42 ( China Daily )
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Huangfu's dandelion-inspired necklace, which weighs just 500 grams in total. [Photo provided to China Daily]

In a fashion editorial spread, a monumental golden necklace unfolds across a model's body like a suspended galaxy. Composed of 33 hollow geometric spheres, each nearly 10 centimeters in diameter, the piece appears at first glance to be heavy, ornate, and solid — an object defined by material excess.

Look closer, however, and the illusion dissolves.

Each sphere is formed from ultra-fine metal filaments radiating outward like a blooming dandelion frozen at the moment before its fluff blows away. Interlaced into a delicate lattice, the structure appears almost weightless, shimmering softly as it catches the light.

When fully extended, the work spans 1.1 meters. Yet despite its scale, its total weight is less than 500 grams — roughly equivalent to the cardboard box it is carried in.

This striking paradox — using one of the heaviest of metals to evoke the lightest forms — lies at the heart of Huangfu Wenxin's artistic practice, a post-2000s artist from Tsinghua University's Academy of Arts and Design.

At the "Hand of Wisdom" program's award ceremony last month, a collaborative Sino-French initiative jointly launched by the Golden Phoenix Science and Art Fund of the Western Returned Scholars Foundation and Yishu 8, an art platform housed in the former Sino-French University in Beijing, she stood out as the sixth recipient of the prize.

The jury was immediately drawn to her work's conceptual clarity and material experimentation, which merges structural precision with an almost poetic lightness.

In conventional perceptions, metal is associated with weight, hardness and permanence. Huangfu's research and practice deliberately challenge this perception.

Her necklace originates from her undergraduate research into the "light-weighting" of metal-based art, an inquiry that asks how traditionally heavy materials might be reconfigured for contemporary expression without losing their structural and visual impact.

"When metal art seeks a contemporary language, scale often becomes important," Huangfu explains. "But larger scale usually brings practical weight challenges. My research explores how to resolve that contradiction."

The resulting graduation work became a practical extension of her thesis, translating theoretical exploration into material form.

Yet the process was far from straightforward. Early experiments included welding and casting, which quickly proved too heavy and technically restrictive for the desired effect.

"I realized welding created unnecessary weight and made the structure overly complex," she says. "I had to rethink the entire construction logic."

The breakthrough came from an unexpected reference: the intangible cultural heritage technique of ronghua, or velvet flower craftsmanship.

Instead of constructing a dense core, Huangfu eliminated the central mass of the dandelion form entirely. She replaced it with fine aluminum wire, hand-twisted into radiating structures that appear to grow organically outward from a point.

The technique demands patience more than force. Each spherical unit requires 40 to 50 branching elements, which are repeated 33 times across the work.

"There were moments when my hands simply couldn't continue," she recalls. "It's repetitive, detailed work."

After more than a month of continuous labor, 33 lightweight spherical structures were completed. A thin layer of gold plating was then applied to the aluminum surface, achieving a luminous effect while keeping material costs and weight to a minimum.

Despite its apparent delicacy, the work maintains a surprising resilience. The fine aluminum filaments can deform under pressure but are easily reshaped.

"It doesn't break easily — it just bends," Huangfu says. "And you can adjust it back with simple tools, like tweezers. It's very forgiving."

This balance between fragility and adaptability reflects a broader conceptual interest in impermanence, transformation, and repair — qualities rarely associated with traditional metalwork.

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