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2012.07.12 Thu, by

Review: Hou Yong

Its profile may be lower than other galleries in 798, but Space Station should by now have a reputation for strong and inventively installed exhibitions by emerging artists. The latest of these was Hou Yong, a painter born in 1976 in Beijing, whose solo outings to date have been aqueous in theme. A long-running series called Black from circa 2006–2008 shows figures swimming in glossy, dark water. >> Read more
Interviews, 2015.04.01 Wed, by

Snakeheads & Bone Ladders—Hou Hanru on Huang Yong Ping

Huang Yong Ping, the most prominent member of "Xiamen Dada", was one of the key artists to have emerged in 1980s China. Here the art historian and director of MAXXI Rome, Hou Hanru, spoke about “Baton Serpent”, a major survey of Huang Yong Ping in Italy... >> Read more
Interviews, 2019.03.08 Fri, by

Forget the Future: The 6th Guangzhou Triennial

The last two decades of precipitous change have provided much grist for recent exhibitions, artist talks, and essays. The pre-eminence of digital technologies in society, the unpredictable advances in biotechnology and Artificial Intelligence, and irreversible environmental degradation encapsulated under the banner of the Anthropocene all speak to a certain disquiet towards unproblematic notions of progress. >> Read more
Interviews, 2018.11.22 Thu, by

“As We May Think, Feedforward”, The 6th Guangzhou Triennial 2018, Guangdong Museum of Art

Titled As We May Think, Feedforward, extending this seminal text’s far-reaching ramifications into the artistic domain as a way to reflect on the trajectories of technological advances and their reverberations throughout the social sphere over the past decades, the 6th edition of Guangzhou Triennial seeks to address the multiple implications engendered by such a technologically constructed time-space - in the real and through the virtual - by examining creative endeavors both from geographical purviews and from cosmic prospects in responding to the challenges and opportunities at stake and to think, once again, through a new alliance of visions by humans and nonhumans alike, machines and flesh with equal footing, organic and inorganic hand in hand, an alternative outlook for a new possibility of ecology whereby a retooled humanism may thrive in a Parliament of Things (to borrow a term from Bruno Latour) in symbiosis and reciprocity. >> Read more
Interviews, 2018.10.09 Tue, by

Yun Hyong-keun
Simon Lee Gallery, London

Simon Lee Gallery is proud to present a survey of paintings and works on paper by Yun Hyong-keun. >> Read more
Interviews, 2018.06.07 Thu, by

A Cubist Portrait of Shi Yong: Artist, Art Worker and Art Collector

(中文) 作为一名多媒体艺术家,施勇(1963年生于上海)的创作涉及行为艺术、装置、影像和雕刻,其不拘一格,风格迥异的作品背后往往体现了其对文化、经济,以及艺术界的深刻剖析。 >> Read more
Interviews, 2018.04.16 Mon, by

Trompe-l’œil
Adeela Sulema, Arslan Farooqi, Georgina Cue, Heo Subin, Kai Wasikowski and Yang Yongliang, curated by Dr. Mikala Tai
sullivan + strumpf, Singapore

Trompe-l’œil brings together six artists from four countries working across trajectories that are both personal and universal, >> Read more
Interviews, 2018.04.06 Fri, by

YANG YONGLIANG
Sullivan+Strumpf, Sydney

Sullivan+Strumpf Sydney is delighted to present the first solo exhibition in Sydney by celebrated Chinese new media artist Yang Yongliang. >> Read more
Interviews, 2017.03.30 Thu, by

SHINSEUNGBACK KIMYONGHUN “Stone”

Have you ever imagined what it would like to be something other than human—a hawk gliding through the air or a monkey swinging from a tree? >> Read more
Interviews, 2017.03.29 Wed, by

Stone, SHINSEUNGBACK KIMYONGHUN

In their project “Stone” Korean artists Shin Seung Back and Kim Yong Hun examine this persistent human interest in “self-improvement” through technological prostheses—applying this theory of “perception extension” to something as inert as a volcanic rock. >> Read more

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