



Dates
Jan 10 – Feb 21, 2026
Make Room is proud to present Strange Tales, a collection of allegorical drawings and paintings that bring modernity to the traditional style. Yongqi Tang digs through ancient myths to reveal the archetypical aspects of human fears and desires as they apply to her story as well as life in our times. The mirrored past of allegory in Western and Eastern narratives of myth shows the similarities across human culture that capture her experiences as an artist, as a foreigner, and as a young woman. The main source of inspiration comes from the collection of stories, Strange Tales from a Chinese Studio, fables about spirits and happenings that inform morality and romanticism. They hold a darkness, stories of demons and spirits, akin to a Chinese Brothers Grimm. A three-panel standing screen demonstrates the similarities between eastern and western storytelling despite the cultural divide. One side holds a scene from "The Painted Skin," a Strange Tale of a demon using painted skin to hide as a young maiden, while the other depicts the story of Butades, where a young woman uses paint and clay to capture the shadow of her lover. Both stories demonstrate a romantic aspect of creation and the illusion of beauty in art.