Assessment: Jesse Ly’s “try, take time—take time, try” at Filter/Space

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Black and white photo of tattooed hands gently cupping a dragonfly, with a blurred natural background.

Black and white photo of tattooed hands gently cupping a dragonfly, with a blurred natural background. Jesse Ly “Have In One’s Hand”/Courtesy Filter/Space

Exploration and trial and error are the purview of the younger, and Asian American artist Jesse Ly isn’t any exception. The push/pull that happens inside particular person minds is both ignored or explored. In Ly’s case, an ongoing exploration and virtually obsessive want for clarification and alter is the mantra. Ly makes use of images, sculpture and mixed-media set up to seek for solutions to their urgent questions—questions that embody all of the traditionally essential queries, with the addition of many distinctive to these trying to navigate the world in 2026.

Black and white photo of a person with two braided pigtails. Another person’s tattooed hand is seen braiding one of the pigtails. The scene is outdoors with blurred trees in the background.

Black and white photo of a person with two braided pigtails. Another person’s tattooed hand is seen braiding one of the pigtails. The scene is outdoors with blurred trees in the background. Jesse Ly/Courtesy Filter/Space

The didactic materials is a research in contrasts. “Through considerations of balancing the tenderness alongside the rigidity and rage needed to cause change manifests via pictorial sequencing and referential iconography.” And “…blending degrees of needed softness and conviction,” however the work speaks for itself and doesn’t want the art-speak.  For instance, a picture of a tattooed arm with a Band-Aid on it reveals the dichotomy of stoicism and compassion, and a picture of somebody braiding one other’s hair denotes sensitivity. The work is gorgeous and well-made—the extreme tsunami of phrases merely washes away the beautiful simplicity of the pictures, and though among the pictures are a bit too apparent, as a result of they’re so nicely thought-about, it really works as a collection.

In addition to the framed pictures there’s a superbly crafted walnut chair that permits two folks to sit down aspect by aspect opposing each other, with arms clasped or touching alongside its middle arm. There are prints embedded within the wooden as nicely, and the chair suggests communication, closeness and sympathy. In addition, there’s a set of hand-made walnut wind chimes that cling alongside a jute rope, becoming a member of two pictures. All the exhibition frames have been additionally made by the artist. It is evident that Ly thinks deeply, which interprets into meticulous craftsmanship.

A close-up black and white photo of a human eye peering through an opening in a dark, textured fabric, with light illuminating the skin around the eye.

A close-up black and white photo of a human eye peering through an opening in a dark, textured fabric, with light illuminating the skin around the eye. Jesse Ly “Peer Through (Viewfinder I)”/Courtesy Filter/Space

Walking by the present, with the pictures considerably randomly scattered alongside the partitions surrounding the set up items, a narrative emerges. Text is pointless because the work speaks for itself so eloquently. It’s a story of development and alter whereas sustaining heat and care, of looking for issues that have been right here all alongside.

Jesse Ly “try, take time—take time, try”  at Filter/Space, 1821 West Hubbard by June 13.


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