Sculpture · 2025

Provisional Structures

by Ruotai Tang

Ruotai Tang’s selected works in 2024-2025, examines the moment when familiar forms remain visible but their original support systems, surrounding contexts, or logic of use have been altered.

Viewers may still recognize these forms, yet can no longer understand them according to prior experience. Tang is interested precisely in this moment of hesitation in perception: when space no longer feels fully reliable, and experience begins to undergo a subtle but persistent disturbance.

Through sculptures and installations that draw on forms such as stairs, shadows, and architectural fragments, the work creates moments in which habitual ways of understanding space begin to hesitate.

Project Details

Artist

Ruotai Tang

Year

2025

Medium

Mixed media, organic materials, metal, wood

Dimensions

Various dimensions

Location

New York, NY

Artist Statement

Ruotai Tang (b. 2002, Zhengzhou, China) is a New York-based artist working primarily in sculpture and installation. He received his BFA in Fine Arts from the School of Visual Arts in New York in 2025. Tang's practice examines stable structures that shape spatial perception in everyday life. Through the removal of function, shifts in support, and the detachment of forms from their original contexts, his work places familiar architectural elements into states that feel recognizable yet difficult to confirm. His installations and sculptures often draw on forms such as stairs, shadows, and architectural fragments to create moments in which habitual ways of understanding space begin to hesitate.

— Ruotai Tang

Interested in This Work?

For inquiries or more information, please contact:

info.unbriefed@gmail.com

Works

Organic Structure

01 / 08

A sculptural form combining organic materials with metal elements. The twisted branch-like structure emerges from a mass of earth and organic matter, creating a hybrid between natural growth and constructed form. The work challenges assumptions about what is grown versus what is built.

Grid Suspension

02 / 08

An aerial view of a metal grid structure that curves and distorts in space. Organic materials rest within the geometric framework, creating tension between systematic organization and natural decay. The piece plays with expectations of how architectural systems should behave.

Layered Plane I

03 / 08

Weathered wooden panels are stacked and offset, creating a geometric composition that hovers on the wall. The subtle shifts in alignment and the traces of use on the materials suggest a structure that has been removed from its original function and reassembled in a new, ambiguous configuration.

Layered Plane II

04 / 08

A variation exploring similar themes with more pronounced weathering and color. The blue-grey and rust tones speak to material decay and transformation over time. A horizontal rod pierces through the composition, suggesting both support and disruption.

Compressed Grid

05 / 08

A metal grid structure curves dramatically over a mass of compressed organic material. The geometric precision of the grid contrasts with the irregular, earth-like base. The work suggests an architectural system under strain, no longer performing its intended stabilizing function.

Diamond Ground

06 / 08

A diamond-shaped form constructed from dark organic material rests directly on the floor. Delicate wire stems emerge from the mass, creating a sense of both weight and lightness. The geometric boundary contains natural material in a way that feels simultaneously controlled and precarious.

Wall Fragment

07 / 08

A detail view of weathered concrete or plaster surface, emphasizing texture, decay, and the passage of time. The subtle line interrupting the surface draws attention to the materiality of architectural elements we typically overlook. The work isolates and reframes what is usually taken for granted.

Forest Light

08 / 08

A glowing orb suspended in a dark forest, attached to a tree by organic binding. The artificial light source creates an uncanny presence in the natural environment. The work transforms a familiar setting by introducing an element that feels both out of place and strangely inevitable.

Sculpture · 2025

Provisional Structures

by Ruotai Tang

Ruotai Tang’s selected work in 2024-2025 examines the moment when familiar forms remain visible but their original support systems, surrounding contexts, or logic of use have been altered.

Viewers may still recognize these forms, yet can no longer understand them according to prior experience. Tang is interested precisely in this moment of hesitation in perception: when space no longer feels fully reliable, and experience begins to undergo a subtle but persistent disturbance.

Through sculptures and installations that draw on forms such as stairs, shadows, and architectural fragments, the work creates moments in which habitual ways of understanding space begin to hesitate.

Project Details

Artist

Ruotai Tang

Year

2025

Medium

Mixed media, organic materials, metal, wood

Dimensions

Various dimensions

Location

New York, NY

Artist Statement

Ruotai Tang (b. 2002, Zhengzhou, China) is a New York-based artist working primarily in sculpture and installation. He received his BFA in Fine Arts from the School of Visual Arts in New York in 2025. Tang's practice examines stable structures that shape spatial perception in everyday life. Through the removal of function, shifts in support, and the detachment of forms from their original contexts, his work places familiar architectural elements into states that feel recognizable yet difficult to confirm. His installations and sculptures often draw on forms such as stairs, shadows, and architectural fragments to create moments in which habitual ways of understanding space begin to hesitate.

— Ruotai Tang

Interested in This Work?

For inquiries or more information, please contact:

info.unbriefed@gmail.com

Works

Organic Structure

01 / 08

A sculptural form combining organic materials with metal elements. The twisted branch-like structure emerges from a mass of earth and organic matter, creating a hybrid between natural growth and constructed form. The work challenges assumptions about what is grown versus what is built.

Grid Suspension

02 / 08

An aerial view of a metal grid structure that curves and distorts in space. Organic materials rest within the geometric framework, creating tension between systematic organization and natural decay. The piece plays with expectations of how architectural systems should behave.

Layered Plane I

03 / 08

Weathered wooden panels are stacked and offset, creating a geometric composition that hovers on the wall. The subtle shifts in alignment and the traces of use on the materials suggest a structure that has been removed from its original function and reassembled in a new, ambiguous configuration.

Layered Plane II

04 / 08

A variation exploring similar themes with more pronounced weathering and color. The blue-grey and rust tones speak to material decay and transformation over time. A horizontal rod pierces through the composition, suggesting both support and disruption.

Compressed Grid

05 / 08

A metal grid structure curves dramatically over a mass of compressed organic material. The geometric precision of the grid contrasts with the irregular, earth-like base. The work suggests an architectural system under strain, no longer performing its intended stabilizing function.

Diamond Ground

06 / 08

A diamond-shaped form constructed from dark organic material rests directly on the floor. Delicate wire stems emerge from the mass, creating a sense of both weight and lightness. The geometric boundary contains natural material in a way that feels simultaneously controlled and precarious.

Wall Fragment

07 / 08

A detail view of weathered concrete or plaster surface, emphasizing texture, decay, and the passage of time. The subtle line interrupting the surface draws attention to the materiality of architectural elements we typically overlook. The work isolates and reframes what is usually taken for granted.

Forest Light

08 / 08

A glowing orb suspended in a dark forest, attached to a tree by organic binding. The artificial light source creates an uncanny presence in the natural environment. The work transforms a familiar setting by introducing an element that feels both out of place and strangely inevitable.

Sculpture · 2025

Provisional Structures

by Ruotai Tang

Ruotai Tang’s selected works in 2024-2025 examines the moment when familiar forms remain visible but their original support systems, surrounding contexts, or logic of use have been altered.

Viewers may still recognize these forms, yet can no longer understand them according to prior experience. Tang is interested precisely in this moment of hesitation in perception: when space no longer feels fully reliable, and experience begins to undergo a subtle but persistent disturbance.

Through sculptures and installations that draw on forms such as stairs, shadows, and architectural fragments, the work creates moments in which habitual ways of understanding space begin to hesitate.

Project Details

Artist

Ruotai Tang

Year

2025

Medium

Mixed media, organic materials, metal, wood

Dimensions

Various dimensions

Location

New York, NY

Artist Statement

Ruotai Tang (b. 2002, Zhengzhou, China) is a New York-based artist working primarily in sculpture and installation. He received his BFA in Fine Arts from the School of Visual Arts in New York in 2025. Tang's practice examines stable structures that shape spatial perception in everyday life. Through the removal of function, shifts in support, and the detachment of forms from their original contexts, his work places familiar architectural elements into states that feel recognizable yet difficult to confirm. His installations and sculptures often draw on forms such as stairs, shadows, and architectural fragments to create moments in which habitual ways of understanding space begin to hesitate.

— Ruotai Tang

Interested in This Work?

For inquiries or more information, please contact:

info.unbriefed@gmail.com

Works

Organic Structure

01 / 08

A sculptural form combining organic materials with metal elements. The twisted branch-like structure emerges from a mass of earth and organic matter, creating a hybrid between natural growth and constructed form. The work challenges assumptions about what is grown versus what is built.

Grid Suspension

02 / 08

An aerial view of a metal grid structure that curves and distorts in space. Organic materials rest within the geometric framework, creating tension between systematic organization and natural decay. The piece plays with expectations of how architectural systems should behave.

Layered Plane I

03 / 08

Weathered wooden panels are stacked and offset, creating a geometric composition that hovers on the wall. The subtle shifts in alignment and the traces of use on the materials suggest a structure that has been removed from its original function and reassembled in a new, ambiguous configuration.

Layered Plane II

04 / 08

A variation exploring similar themes with more pronounced weathering and color. The blue-grey and rust tones speak to material decay and transformation over time. A horizontal rod pierces through the composition, suggesting both support and disruption.

Compressed Grid

05 / 08

A metal grid structure curves dramatically over a mass of compressed organic material. The geometric precision of the grid contrasts with the irregular, earth-like base. The work suggests an architectural system under strain, no longer performing its intended stabilizing function.

Diamond Ground

06 / 08

A diamond-shaped form constructed from dark organic material rests directly on the floor. Delicate wire stems emerge from the mass, creating a sense of both weight and lightness. The geometric boundary contains natural material in a way that feels simultaneously controlled and precarious.

Wall Fragment

07 / 08

A detail view of weathered concrete or plaster surface, emphasizing texture, decay, and the passage of time. The subtle line interrupting the surface draws attention to the materiality of architectural elements we typically overlook. The work isolates and reframes what is usually taken for granted.

Forest Light

08 / 08

A glowing orb suspended in a dark forest, attached to a tree by organic binding. The artificial light source creates an uncanny presence in the natural environment. The work transforms a familiar setting by introducing an element that feels both out of place and strangely inevitable.