Installation by Cheng Tsung FENG reimagines Roppongi’s skyline
For Roppongi Art Night 2025, Taiwanese artist Cheng Tsung FENG presents Sailing Castle: Roppongi, a site-specific wooden installation located at Tenso Shrine, one of the district’s most historic sites with a 641-year legacy. The work continues FENG’s Sailing Castle series, initiated at the Taiwan Lantern Festival in 2019, and marks its sixth iteration.
The installation takes form from the outlines of Roppongi’s iconic architecture, including the National Art Center Tokyo, Suntory Museum of Art, Tokyo Midtown, 21_21 Design Sight, Mori Tower, Sumitomo Roppongi Grand Tower, and Roppongi Crossing. These profiles are abstracted, merged, and reassembled into a singular timber structure that reflects both the city’s urban identity and the traditional craft techniques used in its making.

all images by FIXER Photographic Studio
Modular Timber and canvas Composition forms Sailing Castle
FENG’s Sailing Castle series explores the relationship between architecture, memory, and cultural symbolism. Each work interprets a city’s skyline as a collection of sails gathered in a harbor, structures that both anchor and move through time. In Sailing Castle: Roppongi, this concept is materialized through a framework of interwoven wooden components, where light and shadow define the contours of the city’s silhouette.
The installation’s structural composition recalls boat-building logic and shrine carpentry, integrating modular joints and rhythmic layering. Its lighting scheme transforms the wooden framework into a glowing form that shifts between visibility and transparency, inviting viewers to perceive Roppongi’s architecture as a fluid and collective identity. Through this installation, the artist establishes a dialogue between urban memory and ritual space, positioning Sailing Castle: Roppongi as both a temporary monument and a reflection on how architectural form can become a vessel for shared cultural narratives.

Sailing Castle: Roppongi by Cheng Tsung FENG at Tenso Shrine

wooden installation reinterprets Roppongi’s architectural silhouettes

site-specific work created for Roppongi Art Night 2025

timber framework reinterprets Roppongi’s urban skyline

outlines of iconic landmarks merge into a single wooden form

profiles of Roppongi’s architecture are abstracted and reassembled