Beyond the mountain: photography exhibition by Liu Feiyue

Exhibition opening & artist talk

This spring, IHS hosts “Beyond the Mountain: From Western China to the Dutch Coast,” a photography exhibition by Feiyue Liu. Born in Inner Mongolia, Feiyue is a Chinese documentary photographer whose work has long explored the interplay between humans and their environment. The exhibition captures the quiet tension between nature and human presence. Expansive natural scenes are marked by subtle yet unmistakable traces of industrial and human interference—inviting viewers to reflect on the fragile balance between environment and development. 
Join the opening event & artist talk on April 23, at IHS!

Date
Thursday 23 Apr 2026, 16:00 - 18:00
Type
General
Spoken Language
English
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This exhibition spans two continents and two countries—Western China and the Dutch coast—focusing on how people navigate, inhabit, and perceive territories that are continuously reshaped and transformed. Grasslands, mining pits, coal-fired power plants, dikes, and coastlines form a network of interrelated spatial fields, existing both as natural topographies and as living environments continually produced by technological and social forces. In western China, resource extraction, energy production, and modern infrastructure are redefining traditional pastures and rural landscapes; in the Netherlands, dikes and drainage systems sustain a delicate yet enduring balance between land and sea. The experiences of these disparate regions resonate with each other in Liu’s imagery, revealing the ongoing and complex negotiations between humans and their environment.

In Liu Feiyue’s work, figures and animals inhabit vast expanses—walking, pausing, laboring, or resting, if only momentarily. The human and animal body becomes a vital measure for understanding space, while also reflecting the profound influence of seasonal cycles, climatic conditions, and social structures on everyday life. At the same time, industrial sites, tourism, and public spaces transform formerly utilitarian landscapes into spaces of renewed observation and social meaning, continually reconfiguring their cultural and functional significance. These images not only document reality but also engage with contemporary narratives and imagination: from tourists mimicking lunar landings in volcanic pits, to decorated industrial chimneys; from livestock striding against the wind, to people traversing coastal sands—individuals seek their place within ever-shifting landscapes.

The exhibition presents a vision of “negotiated landscapes,” where nature and technology, tradition and modernity, local experience and global discourse intersect, collectively shaping the spatial forms and perceptual frameworks of contemporary life.
 

More information

The exhibition can be viewed until the 25th of June 2026, at IHS, during office hours.

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