Slide

IN FRONT OF THE EYES

Exhibition

IN FRONT OF THE EYES

Artist:Chen Qiushi、 Fan Shilei

Curator:Hu Yihang

2022.04.09 – 2022.5.17

The Arch Project current exhibition”IN FRONT OF THE EYES”by the artist Qiushi CHEN and Shilei FAN,will be continue until May 17,2022.

 

 

“In Front of the Eyes” hits ideological ways of seeing. In these ways, our “seeing” does not involve any thought, or we do not need to think. Everything has been taken over by ideology. Whether it’s Fan Shilei’s multi-media work that creates a heterotopian space to refute the destructive actions of the cultural industry, or that Chen Qiushi’s image creation spanning multiple photography methods is countered by the problem he targets in reality—“Production no longer having the power to explain” against the establishment of new meanings, all make us “Les non-dupes who errent”. These two artists wandered on the edge of question and answer, what left us is the new reality in front of us that ARCH PROJECT hopes to rethink together with the audience.

Artwork can fold reality and politicise the imagery on the viewer’s retina. Proust narrates art as a way of creating peculiar representations of the world — “for it is not one universe but millions, almost as many as the number of human eyes and human intelligences, that wake up every morning (In Search of Lost Time, Vol. 5: Prisoner and Fugitive). In Proust’s masterpiece, the world as fragmented memory is observed and folded from perspective after perspective, and our experience is overlaid countless times. Just like folding a paper full of words repeatedly, each fold not only emphasises part of the information, but also blurs other information. The appearance of the world changes accordingly.

 

 

Whether we are facing artwork or reality, are we seeing things as they honestly are? As the so-called “seeing is believing” affirms the accuracy of the visual organ, it seems that the clearer we see an object; the more clearly we can analyse a thing; the more detailed we can decompose a movement, the more we tend to think that we are close to the essence of things. The problem with this way of looking, however, is that it overemphasises the value of retinal imaging while ignoring the ideologies that deeply influence us. This approach treats entities as tools; in other words, when a pair of chopsticks can only become a pair of chopsticks; a tombstone can only become a tombstone; a mask can only become a mask, how to use them is the most important thing. And as we become more familiar with the functions of tools, the less we know about these so-called “tools”, and our vision narrows accordingly.

The viewing of the world is essentially the perception of time. Antonioni was “stunned” when confronted with the question of “why keep time” from the Muslim elderly. In the eyes of the old man, the image stagnating in the instant photo is equivalent to the dead past. It doesn’t matter whether the past is a second ago, a day ago or a year ago, the only thing that matters is that it lost its vitality. To think from the perspective of the elderly Muslim, refusing to deny the past means keeping a vague impression of time. Past, present and future are always in-between each other. For example, whether Louis Eugene Varlin led the Paris Commune became déjà-vu, but the ideal of the struggle of the proletariat exists in the future. When the capitalists set the exact hours and hours for workers to commute to get off work, working hours become a dead past. Yesterday’s work and today’s work are indistinguishable and unrelated. As for tomorrow’s – what hasn’t happened yet seems too certain. In Nabokov’s words: “The future is just another obsolescence.”

 

Folded paper is difficult to restore to its original flatness, but they provide us with an opportunity to reject clear images. Taking the weight off the top of the paper and rolling it out individually, the movement of time regardless of direction – as long as it’s not “kept” – will blur the image. The real appearance of the world exists in the wear and tear.

About the artist

Chen Qiushi was born in Changsha, Hunan Province. He holds a bachelor’s degree in law and a bachelor’s degree in philosophy from Southeast University. He graduated from the MFA Department of Glasgow School of Art in 2021. He is currently an editor of China Photography. He won German PEP New Talents 2020.

Fan Shilei graduated from Glasgow School of Art, and now lives and works in Shenzhen. His works have a distinct personal style and exude strong nostalgic and repressive emotions. His works include installation art, video, painting, photography, etc., and express the various cultural forms of the culture industry under globalisation. of malicious manipulation and the destruction of the state of cultural autonomy.

Exhibitions

过往展览

2024.3.10

Arched Wave: Beyond the Boundaries of Geography

Artists: Mutian Chen, Longing Hu, Xiaoliang Huang, Ying Li, Mingjun Luo, Bing Ma, Jianping Zou
Curator: Xinyu Wong

Arched wave: Throwing the hidden string in the discontinuity

Artists: Qiushi Chen, Yujian Guo, Mingjun Luo, Lijun Wang, Li Zhou, Wei Zhou
Producer: Wenjing

Flower For Algernon

Artists: Jing Wang/ Yiwen Zhao
Curator: Xinyu Wong

Perceptual Track

Artists: Haiqiang Guo、Hang Su、Sibo Wu、Wei Zhou
Curator: Yu Xie

Art Channel

艺术频道

ARCH REVIEW | Gaze in the Dim Glow

“The Task of Alchemy”, Pocono Zhao Yu’s solo exhibition at Arch Gallery, presents a subtle sense of time traveling. As the title of the exhibition alludes to, it is as if the smelting and mysterious deeds of some spiritual objects. Within the whisper that fluttering outside of time, this enormous task is under the invisible dome of time.

ARCH INTERVIEW | Guo Yujian

Since then, I have tried to let daydream-like imagination seep into the picture, and those earlier, more symbolic images have also been naturally diluted. Perhaps, it is precisely because of the temperament that seems to be infiltrated by the picture and some image contents that are contrary to reality that cause the association like a dream.

ARCH REVIEW | Guo Yujian :Dangerous Complicitiy

When looking at Guo Yujian’s works, what have been depicted is always in a state of flow, and the secret words that are related to each other become images that avoid us and approach us. The work that takes shape on the canvas in our sight is yet to come, in transition, about to embrace change, and it will not push us away until the feeling is fulfil.

ARCH 采访 | 郑江

“边界惊险但精彩,像绘制一个形象生动的轮廓线时一样充满诱惑力。我觉得创作过程本身就包含对艺术形式的思考,两者应该是一体、贴切的。”

ARCH REVIEW | 在倦意来临时服药

恍惚是我们长时间被某种思维或事物压制后常常落入的状态。在这个状态中,时间如流体般被我们任意搬运、搅动,又或是尽兴逐流。而林舒的作品常常通过对空间的加工让我们对影像中的实体逐渐疏远,以至于被送入一个被剥去嘈杂的心理状态,意识取代了被记忆包裹的身体,从而任意涌动。

ARCH 采访 | 周轶伦

周轶伦的作品本质上只指向物本身,观众如何去理解其作品取决于一个时代所赋予大众的经验与记忆。“我喜欢试验失败,每次失败的剩余痕迹都是完美的新作品局部。”

Tuesday – Sunday
10.00am – 6.00pm

ARCH Gallery
Yinjiachong Rd, Tianxin District
410000 Changsha

星期二 – 星期日
上午10.00 – 下午6.00

湖南省长沙市天心区殷家冲路
1123文创园一楼
ARCH GALLERY

© 2021  Arch Gallery all rights reserved. Email: info@archgallery.net
Site by XYCO