Artists: Mire Lee, Yong Xiang Li, Pedro Neves Marques, Issy Wood
Exhibition title: Breathing Through Skin
Curated by: Alvin Li
Venue: Antenna Space, Shanghai, China
Date: November 7, 2020 – January 2, 2021
Photography: images copyright and courtesy of the artists and Antenna Space, Shanghai
Note: Exhibition text “Breathing Through Skin” by Alvin is available here
Bringing together new and recent works—several of which have been especially conceived for this occasion—“Breathing Through Skin” highlights four artists and their critical invocations of monstrosity—the monster as constructed motif in horror and the monstrous as an inherent wildness intrinsic to desire. Together, these works traverse a range of binaries, provoking an erotic and affective engagement with bodies in the world, beyond the trappings of monstrified difference.
The monstrous body is always a construct and a projection, bearing the traces of historically specific othering processes. In Bram Stoker’s Dracula (1897), the quintessential modern vampire novel, the eponymous Count Dracula embodies an eclectic range of traits—race, class, gender, sexuality, nationality—all of which were deemed threatening to British national identity at the time by and within fictional texts, sexual science, and psychopathology. Whereas Dracula incarnated the phobias of the Victorian era, contemporary vampires like those in the Vampire Chronicles and Twilight series are no longer monstrous or even particularly distant from hegemonic identity: they are white, monogamous, purely aesthetic creatures (and oftentimes collectors). This latter-day fantasy of the vampire entails an act of far greater violence than its 19th-century Gothic predecessors: the total erasure of otherness from representation. Meanwhile in reality, through advanced biotechnologies, the monstrification and erasure of certain bodies has evidently continued, if not intensified, becoming ever stealthier.
Jack Halberstam relates the popular consumption of horror to the genre’s defining affective structure: “[The] monster inspires fear and desire at the same time: fear of and desire for the other, fear of and desire for the possibly latent perversity lurking within readers and audiences themselves.”[1] The entwined feelings of dread and want that operate within horror not only make it a particularly productive genre for appropriation, but also reveal the ambivalent, unruly, sometimes ‘perverted’ dimension of desire.
In this exhibition Yong Xiang Li and Pedro Neves Marques contribute new narrative works to the monster canon, appropriating the technologies of monster-making to destabilize and challenge a range of deep-rooted epistemological binaries: us and others, male and female, human and non-human. Meanwhile, interested in abjection and perversion, Mire Lee and Issy Wood present moody, sensuous works that channel a sense of vital eroticism.
The exhibition is curated by Alvin Li
[1] Jack Halberstam, Skin Shows: Gothic Horror and the Technology of Monsters, Duke University Press: 1995, P13
Breathing Through Skin, 2020, exhibition view, Antenna Space, Shanghai
Breathing Through Skin, 2020, exhibition view, Antenna Space, Shanghai
Breathing Through Skin, 2020, exhibition view, Antenna Space, Shanghai
Breathing Through Skin, 2020, exhibition view, Antenna Space, Shanghai
Breathing Through Skin, 2020, exhibition view, Antenna Space, Shanghai
Breathing Through Skin, 2020, exhibition view, Antenna Space, Shanghai
ISSY WOOD, Study for ‘ass midgets’, 2020, Oil on linen, 30 x 24 x 2 cm
ISSY WOOD, Study for ‘ass midgets’, 2020, Oil on linen, 30 x 24 x 2 cm
ISSY WOOD, Unless you try, 2020, Oil on velvet, 100 x 100 x 5 cm
ISSY WOOD, Unless you try, 2020, Oil on velvet, 100 x 100 x 5 cm
ISSY WOOD, Europe! Fantasy!, 2020, Oil on linen, 140.5 x 100.5 x 4.5 cm
ISSY WOOD, Europe! Fantasy!, 2020, Oil on linen, 140.5 x 100.5 x 4.5 cm
ISSY WOOD, Untitled (small world), 2020, Oil on linen, 20 x 30 x 2 cm
ISSY WOOD, Untitled (small world), 2020, Oil on linen, 20 x 30 x 2 cm
ISSY WOOD, Untitled (what I want), 2020, Oil on linen, 21 x 30 x 2 cm
ISSY WOOD, Untitled (what I want), 2020, Oil on linen, 21 x 30 x 2 cm
ISSY WOOD, Untitled (higher education), 2020, Oil on linen, 30 x 30 x 2 cm
MIRE LEE, Carriers, horizontal forms, 2020, Plaster, resin, silicone, pvc hoses, fabric, electronic motors, motor circuit, 4.5 x 6.5 m
MIRE LEE, Carriers, horizontal forms, 2020, Plaster, resin, silicone, pvc hoses, fabric, electronic motors, motor circuit, 4.5 x 6.5 m
MIRE LEE, Carriers, horizontal forms, 2020, Plaster, resin, silicone, pvc hoses, fabric, electronic motors, motor circuit, 4.5 x 6.5 m
MIRE LEE, Carriers, horizontal forms, 2020, Plaster, resin, silicone, pvc hoses, fabric, electronic motors, motor circuit, 4.5 x 6.5 m
PEDRO NEVES MARQUES, HAUT, A Mordida (The Bite), 2018, Double-channel film installation, 20 min
Yong Xiang Li, I’m not in love (how to feed on humans), 2020, Single-channel video, 27 min
Yong Xiang Li, I’m not in love (how to feed on humans), 2020, Single-channel video, 27 min
Yong Xiang Li, I’m not in love (how to feed on humans), 2020, Single-channel video, 27 min
Yong Xiang Li, Doors, 2020, Oil and acrylic on gessoed panel, Mdf, Pine, 260 x 160 x 50 cm
Yong Xiang Li, Doors, 2020, Oil and acrylic on gessoed panel, Mdf, Pine, 260 x 160 x 50 cm
Yong Xiang Li, The hike, a giant dog, 2020, Oil and acrylic on gessoed panel, 120 x 100 cm
Yong Xiang Li, The hike, a giant dog, 2020, Oil and acrylic on gessoed panel, 120 x 100 cm
Yong Xiang Li, The hike, a giant dog, 2020, Oil and acrylic on gessoed panel, 120 x 100 cm