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Thursday, November 28, 2024 |
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Cao Fei transforms the Art Gallery of NSW into a futuristic cyber city in her first Australian retrospective |
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Installation view of the Cao Fei: My City is Yours 曹斐: 欢迎登陆 exhibition at the Art Gallery of New South Wales, 30 November 2024 13 April 2025, artworks © Cao Fei. Courtesy the artist, Vitamin Creative Space and Sprüth Magers, photo © Art Gallery of New South Wales, Diana Panuccio.
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SYDNEY.- Leading Chinese contemporary artist Cao Fei brings the buzzing energy of the city to the Art Gallery of New South Wales this summer for the artists first major solo exhibition in Australia. Cao Fei: My City is Yours 曹斐: 欢迎登陆, is a Sydney-exclusive exhibition staged as part of the Sydney International Art Series 202425, featuring key works from the artists 30-year career, including the premiere of two new commissions.
Voted by ArtReview magazine in 2023 as one of the art worlds 10 most influential people, Cao Fei has documented Chinas rapid urbanisation, globalisation and digital revolution for more than two decades, interpreting the energy of the contemporary metropolis in mesmerising films, photography and large-scale interactive and immersive installations.
Spanning the Ainsworth Family Gallerys 1300-square-metre space in the Art Gallerys Naala Badu building, Caos exhibition explores Chinas rapid urban, technological and social transformations from the Y2K period to today. Designed by the artist and Hong Kongs Beau Architects, the exhibition takes the form of a cityscape. Divided into a series of civic zones a central plaza, a theatre, a restaurant, a factory and a haven for spiritual contemplation the exhibitions design is inspired by Chinas recent urban transformation.
My City is Yours examines two main themes that have preoccupied the artists practice since the beginning of her career: the city and technology. The exhibition brings together key works from the late 1990s to today, including early portraits of cosplayers and street dancers shot on DV-camcorder to pioneering net art, photography, videogames, virtual reality and immersive installations.
Exhibition highlights include Cosplayers 2004, one of her most renowned video works that captures the imaginative identities of Chinas younger generation of cosplayers; RMB City 200711, an ambitious art project that saw Cao build a virtual metropolis with a running economy, manifesto and mayor on the online platform Second Life; and Nova 2019, a feature-length, retro-futurist film that tells the story of a computer scientists attempt to turn humans into digital matter. Super delivery: Sydney 2024 will be displayed for the duration of the exhibition on the monumental screen that overlooks the Aqualand Atrium in Naala Badu.
The exhibition will also debut three major Sydney-specific works. One of the exhibitions zones pays homage to the iconic, now-closed Sydney yum cha restaurant, the Marigold. Visitors will exit the exhibition through an installation inspired by the restaurants 1990s Canto-decor, including salvaged red carpet and dim-sum trolleys from the former venue, in a setting that highlights the importance of such places in the cultural memory of the city for the local Chinese diaspora.
Screened within the exhibition is a new music video, Hip hop: Sydney 2024, featuring local artists, aunties, chefs and shopkeepers performing hip-hop moves to new music by KoreanAustralian musicians 1300. Filmed in more than 20 locations across Sydneys Haymarket and Burwood Chinatowns with a cast of over 60 community members from Benjamin Law and Claudia Chan Shaw to young cosplayers and 86-year-old George Wing Kee this new work is the latest instalment in a series of videos that the artist has shot around the world, from Guangzhou to New York.
A further highlight in the exhibition is a special new project titled Golden wattle 2024. The installation is dedicated to Caos late sister Cao Xiaoyun (19712022), an artist who migrated from Guangzhou to Sydney in the late 1990s and had a particular fondness for the golden wattle (Acacia pycnantha), Australias national flower. This deeply personal work uses archival materials, family photographs and artworks to explore one individuals diasporic journey.
Minister for the Arts, Music and the Night-time Economy, and Minister for Jobs and Tourism John Graham said: Cao Fei is one of the most innovative artists working today. Im pleased that our culture lovers will be able to immerse themselves in the work of this incredible Chinese artist in Sydney this summer.
The three exhibitions in the Sydney International Art Series 202425 program reflect our ambition to ensure Sydney is a global cultural hub where art and creativity is celebrated a place where locals and visitors can experience the most exciting cultural offerings from around Sydney, New South Wales, Australia, and the world, said Minister Graham.
Art Gallery of New South Wales director Michael Brand said: This exhibition continues the Art Gallerys long engagement with Chinese art, which began in the 1890s. Cao Feis connection to Sydney is multilayered. Sydney is the official sister city of her hometown, Guangzhou, and it is also the place her late sister, Cao Xiaoyun, called home for many years.
Known for her compelling storytelling, Cao is one of the most prolific and globally influential contemporary Chinese artists working today and she remains at the forefront of new media. The Art Gallerys exhibition will be unlike anything our visitors have experienced before Caos unique blend of virtual worlds and cutting-edge technology creates playful and inventive multimedia installations that will transport visitors into her world.
The exhibition is co-curated by Art Gallery of New South Wales curator of film, Ruby Arrowsmith-Todd, and curator of Chinese art, Yin Cao, who have worked closely with the artist to develop the exhibition.
Cao Fei is a worldbuilder, a chronicler, a keen witness to her historical era. Since the late 1990s, she has documented the rapid changes in China through video, photography, sculpture and expanded installations. Always at the forefront of experimenting with new media, Caos universe is an artistic one where time is out of joint, reality slips into fantasy, people tap in and out of virtual realms, and radical, disjunctive upheavals are an everyday fact of life, said Arrowsmith-Todd.
'Cao Fei finds inspiration from her surroundings and applies a unique, subtle, lively and humorous approach to show how ordinary people cope with the changes brought about urbanisation and technological developments in their lives, added Yin Cao.
Born in Guangzhou in 1978, Cao Fei now lives and works in Beijing. Her solo exhibitions have been held at venues including the UCCA Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing (2021); Serpentine Galleries, London (2020); Centre Pompidou, Paris (2019); MoMA PS1, New York (2016); and Tate Modern, London (2013). Caos work has been featured in group exhibitions and major biennial and triennial exhibitions worldwide since the early 2000s, including Aichi, Istanbul, Moscow, Shanghai, Sharjah, Sydney, Taipei, Venice and Yokohama.
The exhibition is accompanied by a publication designed by Sydney-based artist and graphic designer Evi O that captures the playfulness of Cao Feis art. The publication features reproductions of key works and new writing from contributors including the exhibition co-curators Ruby Arrowsmith-Todd and Yin Cao, as well as renowned scholar of Chinese contemporary art Hou Hanru and AsianAustralian writers Michael Sun and Pao-chen Tang.
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