Ai Weiwei
Luke Ching Chin-wai
Huang Xiaopeng
Michael Lee
Leung Chi Wo
Dinu Li
Tintin Wulia
Alvaro Rodriguez Fominaya
An exhibition about how Asia is perceived and constructed, both from within and from outside. This exhibition is about many things and not all of them within the range of political correctness. It is about how Asia is perceived and constructed, both from within and from the outside. It is about the contemporary challenges we are facing, although these challenges are not unique to Asia. It is about the identity of multiple realities and about the reality of multiple and complex identities.
curated by Alvaro Rodriguez Fominaya
Chalk Horse, Sydney, and Para/Site Art Space, Hong Kong, are honored to present
The Problem of Asia, an exhibition about how Asia is perceived and constructed, both
from within and from outside.
This exhibition is about many things and not all of them within the range of political
correctness. It is about how Asia is perceived and constructed, both from within and
from the outside. It is about the contemporary challenges we are facing, although
these challenges are not unique to Asia. It is about the identity of multiple realities and
about the reality of multiple and complex identities.
The exhibition is proposed as a catalytic, discursive device, activated through the
artists that are part of this first installment of an improvised project. The narratives
included in the show address themes of growth; corruption; memory; history; language;
colonialism; and freedom.
Drawing on research in China, Hong Kong, Singapore and Indonesia, seven artists are
included, across video, performance, installation, text and drawing. Ai Weiwei’s
videos document Beijing ring roads, focusing on the ‘process of pure observation and
the nature of time...and the urban reality that defines Beijing’. Urban reality versus
urban utopia is explained through Michael Lee’s Spiral Supermart, a new project from
the series Second-Hand City, where rubbles of collapsed buildings arrive at a futuristic
factory in China to be analyzed, resurrected and displayed for resale.
Luke Ching
Chin-wai and Huang Xiaopeng focus on language, although their research leads
them through different concerns from translation software to impromptu Cantonese
lessons for Japanese residents. Dinu Li addresses the problem of Asia with a more
direct strategy, through a video performance denouncing corruption, put in context with
the inclusion of archival images from Chinese propaganda films. Leung Chi Wo
enacts a new performance based on his My Name is Victoria series, which
encompasses references to the colonial past of Hong Kong.
Tintin Wulia’s installation
is a research on the notions of nationality/nation/border through the relationship
between citizenship, mobility, and political power, and between territory, mapping and
cartography.
This project is conceived as a work-in-progress that is open to other additions and
network plug-ins. Australia is a unique location to launch this exhibition, as its
multilayered relationship with the idea of Asia provides a cultural framework where the
title of the exhibition comes alive.
For more information, please contact Katie Grube of Chalk Horse (Sydney) at
katie@chalkhorse.com.au or +612 9211 8999.
Opening: Thursday, 29 April 2010, 6-8pm
Chalk Horse, Sydney
94 Cooper Street Surry Hills, NSW 2010
Wed - Sat 12 - 6 PM
and by appointment