‘9+ONE: Interdimensional Journeys’ returns with Part II at Edge Gallery

By Arts & Entertainment Desk
25 September 2025, 06:43 AM
UPDATED 25 September 2025, 12:47 PM
Two years on, Part II continues that spirit. This edition places nine artists in the spotlight, while the original eighteen remain as the symbolic “+ONE” — etched into memory, time, and artistic discourse. Their earlier contributions highlight that exhibitions are not isolated events but part of an ongoing conversation across years, works, and audiences.

Edge Gallery is currently hosting "9+ONE: Interdimensional Journeys Part II", which opened on September 12 and will run until October 4, from 10am to 10pm daily. The exhibition brings together nine emerging artists working across painting, sketch, relief, ceramics, and installation.

The series first began in 2023, when "9+ONE: Interdimensional Journeys" presented eighteen young artists in a bold experiment of dialogue, perception, and imagination. That debut was praised for its freshness and provocation, reminding audiences that art's role often lies in posing questions rather than providing answers.

Two years on, Part II continues that spirit. This edition places nine artists in the spotlight, while the original eighteen remain as the symbolic "+ONE" — etched into memory, time, and artistic discourse. Their earlier contributions highlight that exhibitions are not isolated events but part of an ongoing conversation across years, works, and audiences.

The works on display stretch across contemporary and traditional practices, engaging with themes of uncertainty, memory, and speculative futures. Some bend time and personal history, others suggest parallel selves or shifting spaces. Together, they echo the speculative frontiers of science — from string theory to the multiverse — without attempting to explain them. Instead, they create encounters that allow audiences to feel the unprovable and imagine what lies beyond certainty.

By revisiting the terrain first explored in 2023, Edge Gallery affirms its curatorial vision: to situate art at the threshold where perception falters and imagination begins.