A subtle crack runs through the image, unsettling what we believe we see. With Crack in the Curtain, Huang Peishan creates a visual environment where reality and fiction converge, questioning the very role of photography in the digital age. A multimedia artist born in Yunnan and based between Shanghai and New York, Huang begins with photography only to push it beyond its limits. Through digital editing, artificial intelligence and material processes such as resin casting and composite printing, she transforms images into physical, almost sculptural objects. Their seemingly familiar surfaces reveal fractures and disruptions that undermine the illusion of documentary truth. The exhibition unfolds as an immersive space built from everyday elements - curtains, mirrors, architectural structures - reassembled into scenes that feel both intimate and estranged. Here, opposites such as protection and exposure coexist, inviting viewers to question their own perception. At the core of Huang’s practice lies a reflection on the nature of contemporary images: no longer simple records, but unstable surfaces open to multiple interpretations and possibilities.