Zine 'Falling Angel'

Zine 'Falling Angel'

NT$980
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Zine 'Falling Angel'

Artist Publishing

Falling Angel

Falling Angel

Chang Wei Fun (黃昶維)

❝ We are all fallen angels, we just look different. ❞

NT$980
Taxes included.

Falling Angel is not about angels, but about the state that follows the fall.
Moments of deviation, distortion, and suspension in mid-air are preserved, page by page.
The figures appear to be falling, yet also seem to be adjusting to new positions.

This zine revolves around a direct idea:
we share the same sense of weightlessness, though each of us takes on a different form.
Between the images, there are no standard answers—lines loosen, proportions drift,
and bodies are stretched, rearranged, enlarged, or reduced within their scenes.

This is not to clarify a narrative,
but to preserve a state of becoming.

You are invited to take a look—
at bodies and identities gradually taking shape in the midst of falling.

Artist Profile

Working through creation to address an inner unease with the world, the artist is known for combining cross-cultural elements through a range of media, including collage, painting, and photography. Currently based in Australia.

Previously, the artist has worked as a contributing photographer for Unitas Literary Magazine, created cover illustrations for Saline Land Literature Monthly, and participated in the production team for the National Development Council’s Regional Revitalization: Eastern Traditional Industries video series.

Product Details
  • Artist hand-sewn binding
  • First edition, limited to 40 copies with individual numbering
  • Size: 130 × 208 mm
  • 42 pages · art paper · selected asymmetrical page layouts
Zine 'Falling Angel'

Insights

Falling Angel is not about angels,
but about the state that comes after the fall.

Moments of deviation, distortion, and suspension in mid-air
are preserved, page by page.
The figures appear to be falling,
yet they also seem to be adjusting to new positions.

This zine revolves around a simple idea:
we share the same sense of weightlessness,
even though each of us grows into a different form.

There are no standard answers between the images.
Lines loosen, proportions drift.
Bodies are stretched, rearranged, enlarged, or reduced within their scenes—
not to clarify a narrative,
but to retain a state of becoming.

You are invited to take a look—
at bodies and identities gradually taking shape
in the midst of falling.

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