As such, Chan’s exhibition is appropriately located underground, evoking the origin story of the materials comprising much of her work. Chan then adds her own layers through sometimes found, sometimes fabricated elements for pieces which in combination sit firmly, if not always easily within their “hybrid” states of being.
In fact, many works unearth how Chan has always combined readymade industrial objects, like shipping pallets, with natural elements or their surrogates, such as the golden-sprayed floral accents helping to make “Dark Light, Subterranean Circuit” (2023) appear part gothic-stained glass window, part trellis, while lending the two-part wall and floor work a transcendental aspect. Elsewhere, “Wood Wide Web (Unearth)” (2026), uses wood branches to form tentacles cast in bronze, thus breaking from the source material, appearing synaptic and otherworldly in its final manifestation.
In other words, readymade objects — pallets, egg cartons, hex nut fasteners — the artist often used to assemble works in the past appear less obvious here; instead, being represented by Chan through moulds or by scaling up her source material to be more robust, if in increasingly abstract proportions. Then again, this process feeds how material reality and by extension, its human makers and shapers, are themselves being led to their breaking point.
Chan’s response? To reiterate her commitment to seemingly outmoded techniques and forms while advancing her own practice. Regardless, there remains an ongoing fascination with what came before and showing it, along with her abiding respect for those who continue to inspire her, from Mary Anning’s shell game to the sun tunnels of Nancy Holt for “Double Passage (Verdigris)” (2024). In the end, Hybrid Palimpsests is marked by Chan’s curiosity about the world around her, and the ability to externalise an inherent sense of self through an increasingly confident “maker’s mark” which embeds itself through the resulting work, whatever the current climate dictates.
Maybe that’s why so much of what is being shown at He Art Museum is not fixated on youth at all but rather on growth and metamorphosis. For example, Chan references many types of shells throughout the exhibition: seashells, eggshells, and in moulds used to move away from readymade sources when making works like “Maker’s Egg Cases” (2026).
These shells, like her reference to parchment, itself made from animal skins, connects Chan’s outdoor 2026 Blindfold Receptor series (“Xanthodes,” “Milionia Zonea,” “Spotted Skipper”) to “Chrysalis (lunar)” (2026) and “Moth (Emperor, Pink lined Sphinx)” (2024) indoors. Based on caterpillars and moths, all imply a life cycle which depends on the camouflage or shedding of skins to reach their full potential. Such biomorphic conditions have increasingly embedded themselves within Chan’s work, showing aesthetically how the past clings to the present. Likewise, the shadows they create follow viewers as they move about within the museum’s underground lair, itself connecting to the mines and quarries Chan previously visited during her travels as the 2020 BMW Art Basel Art Journey winner.
“What emerges is a material record of how value is ascribed, forgotten, and reclaimed,” according to the e-brochure, much like art itself — a sentiment works such as “The Grip” (2020) can attest to, and artists like Leelee Chan insist on, as but one claim to personhood through artmaking. Luckily, audiences can still experience this for themselves in Hybrid Palimpsests, as the exhibition has been extended through 19 July.

