LÜBECK.- A moth circles a light. Its flight appears erratic and yet inevitable, as if guided by an invisible law. Between attraction and destruction, orientation and disorientation, unfolds a movement that feels both familiar and mysterious.
Zishi Han takes this nocturnal scene as the starting point for his first institutional solo exhibition in Germany, Fatal Attraction, at the Overbeck-Gesellschaft. The exhibition is a sensual yet conceptual exploration of lightas promise and threat, as the engine of desire and an instrument of control.
At its center stands the figure of the motha creature irresistibly drawn to light though unable to escape it. Across Hans practice, the moth is a metaphor for human impulses: the yearning for visibility, the pleasure of looking, the fatal attachment to power. In a dense spatial installation combining video, sculpture, and sound, Han intertwines nocturnal observations from Lübecks green spaces with questions of desire, queerness, and diasporic experience. Light here is not just illumination but a social, political, and erotic fielda cage, a sacrament, and a site of self- and other-recognition.
Created specifically for Lübeck, a new film extends Hans ongoing moths series. In static image compositions, moths and human bodiesqueer friends of the artistencounter each other in a choreographed interplay of exposure and concealment. The camera remains motionless while the images oscillate between delicate observation and hypnotic fixation. Each scene resembles a small stage on which desire and vulnerability, distance and intimacy, are simultaneously negotiated. The fluttering of wings beneath the cold glow of a street light becomes a masochistic performanceof the human drive toward light, toward illumination, and of the violence inherent in visibility itself.
In the exhibition, we encounter the privet hawk moth (Sphinx ligustri), one of the largest and most striking species of nocturnal moth, known to be attracted to ultraviolet light. With a wingspan of up to twelve centimeters, the pattern of its wingscomposed of brown, grey, and delicate pink markingsappears both ornamental and functional: during the day it serves as camouflage, while at night it becomes a spectacular visual presence. The species was first described in the mid-eighteenth century by the Swedish biologist Carl Linnaeus (17071778), at a time when European naturalists began to formalize systems of scientific classification. In Linnaeuss work, living beings were organized into hierarchical categories and assigned names. Within this system, each organism became a clearly delineated, legible entity. The moth was thus inscribed into the language of taxonomy. Its identity was fixed within a system designed to render nature comprehensible, predictable, and recognizable. Subjectivity was inseparable from this process of categorization: the moth existed both in and of itself and as a specimen within a human-made hierarchya trace of life preserved through classification.
The exhibition also includes a new work from Hans exuviae series: elongated and cocoon-like metal shells, made of the aluminum chains usually used as insect barriers, are entwined around two horizontally mounted street lamp posts. Low-frequency vibrations cause the chains to tremble, producing a metallic hum reminiscent of the faint beating of wings. In the interplay of sound, light, and movement, an unstable mesh emergesa space in which the boundaries between body and environment, technology and nature, human and insect begin to blur.
As in previous works, Han is concerned with the conditions of perception: Who sees, who is seen, and at what cost? Lightonce a symbol of enlightenment in modernityhere appears ambivalent, both a tool of knowledge and a mechanism of surveillance. The moth, trapped in the beam of the lamp, becomes a symbol of a body unable to escape its gaze.
Fatal Attraction is not only a study of the relationship between light and living beings, but also an allegory of the contemporary gazea gaze that seduces as it controls, that fixes as it becomes captive itself. Hans works unfold a quiet tension between fascination and resistance, between the desire to see and the fear of being seen. They speak of an existence in the in-betweenof bodies that are both object and subject of desire, of light that entrances and consumes.
Curated by Paula Kommoss.