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  • May 26, 2017

Sarah Contos Wins Australia’s Richest Prize for Young Contemporary Artists

2017 Ramsay Art Prize winner SARAH CONTOS with her work Sarah Contos Presents: The Long Kiss Goodbye

AAP WEB REVIEW

EXHIBITION:          Seeds of Time

INSTITUTION:       Shanghai Himalayas Museum

AUTHOR:                 Arthur Solway

COUNTRY TAG:    China

ORIGINAL WC:      904
CURRENT WC:      909

Two resounding messages were loud and clear in “Chapter 2” of the Shanghai Project at the Shanghai Himalayas Museum: the first was that planet Earth is a terrible mess and we are facing horrific environmental consequences unless we do something soon and fast. The second message was equally apparent: this isn’t really an art exhibition per se, but more an experimental, multidisciplinary think tank cooked up by co-curators Hans-Ulrich Obrist, artistic director of the Serpentine Galleries in London, and Yongwoo Lee, the director of the Shanghai Himalayas Museum. For the Shanghai Project, the pair has blurred the line between curator and activist.

            The Shanghai Project Chapter 2 elaborated on some of the central ecological themes about survival and sustainability from its first iteration, “Envision 2116,” that focused on climate change and its effects a century later. This year’s chapter was subtitled “Seeds of Time,” after the documentary film featuring Cary Fowler, an American agriculturalist who spearheaded the Svalbard Global Seed Vault located in the far-flung Arctic region of Norway, which aims to conserve and secure the world’s food supply by collecting more than 880,000 seed samples from 233 countries and storing them in a heavily reinforced tunnel inside a frozen mountain. The film could be read as either an ode to a mind-boggling scientific achievement, or as one of the more apocalyptic propositions in the Shanghai Project’s presentation.

            The 61 individuals and groups participating in the Project and its interdisciplinary exhibition are referred to as “Researchers.” Among the group was a consortium of international artists, a good many of which are from China. There was the young conceptual artist aaajiao, veterans Cai Guo-Qiang and Qiu Zhijie, and “Root Researcher” Qiu Anxiong, whose team comprised of members from various fields beyond art. Hans-Ulrich Obrist described the overall endeavor as producing a “new reality, new alliances in the 21st century, and bridging disciplines.” Special mention was made by Obrist in his opening keynote address of Gustav Metzger (1926–2017), a pioneering environmental and political activist and artist who in 1958 was championing anti-capitalist, anti-consumerist movements and was involved in the early Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, serving a short stint of jail time for advocating mass civil disobedience. Sadly, Metzger passed away a month before the Shanghai Project launched its second chapter, but his radical, experimental work felt like the presiding spirit over the entire exhibition.

On view were works conceived in 1968 from Metzger’s series “Extremes Touch: Dancing Tubes, Mica Cube, Drop on Hotplate, Untitled.” Elemental materials are at the core of Metzger’s experimental works; here, he uses compressed air to make plastic tubes suspended over a long trough of water “dance,” while silvery slivers of mica flakes that swirl within a clear plexiglass box mounted on the wall reflect light. Metzger explored empirical knowledge and phenomena based on experimentation and observation rather than purely theoretical laws of nature, but the artist was just as concerned about chaos, randomness and nature's irregularities that straddle order and disorder. His first manifesto Auto-Destructive Art (1959) was a call for social and political action against what he believed to be the driving forces leading to global annihilation.

            Another successful presentation in the show was aaajiao’s Body Shadow (2015), for which the artist developed an algorithm to scan the human body for 3D imaging and track the activity in meridian pathways, tapping into the belief in traditional Chinese medicine that qi flows within the human body. Aaajiao combined his algorithm with the art of tattooing, and presented Body Shadow as a video-projected diptych, mapping an internal micro-universe directly onto his own body in an attempt to portray the energy flowing in his own meridian system.

This smartly complemented Information Field (2017), conceived and created by Dai Zhikang, the well-known entrepreneur and founder of Shanghai’s Zendai Group, along with his collaborator Lin Shumin. The artwork is meant to respond to the electrical currents within a visitor’s body when he sits in designated areas within the multimedia installation. Information Field centers on the same concepts that are in aaajiao’s presentation, and explores the relationship between the universe and man, as well as the exacerbation of human health problems due to what are expected to be poor ecological conditions in the next 100 years. However, on a positive note, the collaborators assert that though humans appear to exist independently, we are actually in constant interaction with one another.

That is the point where Body Shadow departs from Information Field. Aaajiao asserts that ever-changing energy channels constitute our individuality. Collaborating with a traditional Chinese medicine doctor and a tattoo artist, aaajiao advances a holistic philosophy and approach to Chinese medical practices. The understanding and treatment of illness caused by deteriorating environmental conditions is indisputably part of today’s reality. To heal ourselves, as the artist states, we must first comprehend the many systems of our bodies, and not just those found in Western medicine.

In keeping with the idea that we need to heal ourselves in tandem with healing “Spaceship Earth,” as the architect and evolutionary strategist R. Buckminster Fuller coined it—though the visionary was conspicuously absent from “Seeds of Time”— Yoko Ono's Wish Tree, from an ongoing series she began as early as 1981, was placed on the third floor’s entry rotunda. However, it appeared like a potted plant sadly deprived of water. A scant number of handwritten wishes hung from its branches among brittle leaves. Perhaps, in 2017, human wishes are also on the endangered species list.

“Seeds of Time” is on view at the Shanghai Himalayas Museum until July 30, 2017. 

To read more of ArtAsiaPacific’s articles on Shanghaivisit our Digital Library.

Australian artist Sarah Contos has been announced as the winner of the inaugural Ramsay Art Prize with her work Sarah Contos Presents: The Long Kiss Goodbye (2016), receiving AUD 100,000 on Friday, 26 May.

Described as her “most ambitious work to date” by Art Gallery of South Australia (AGSA) director Nick Mitzevich, Contos’s prize-winning creation features a quilt created by hand and machine, which contains personal remnants of her practice from the last four years. AGSA inaugural curator for contemporary arts Leigh Robb, who was one of the judges of the prize, said of the artist, “Contos’s 21st century quilt spills over, and, like a new epic history tableaux, celebrates power women in all their glory with fireworks, sequins and PVC.”

The judging panel—Rhana Devenport, director of the Auckland Art Gallery; Nell, an Australian artist; and Leigh Robb—were unanimous in their selection and feel that Contos “represents a wonderful beginning for the Prize” as its first winner.

In her artist statement, Contos explained the significance of her work: “As an artist whose process inhabits fantasy roles to reflect on female experience, I create self-generated mythologies that evoke dichotomies synonymous with being a woman. This work is a ‘scrapbook’ of these contrasts and embraces their emotional value.”

Born in Perth and currently based in Sydney, 39-year-old Contos’s work include collages, sculptures and installations. She has been featured in a number of group exhibitions in Australia, and will present her creations in the forthcoming “1917: The Great Strike” exhibition at Sydney art space Carriageworks. The show will commemorate one of the largest industrial conflicts in Australia, which occurred a century ago.

Dubbed “Australia’s richest prize for young contemporary artists,” The Ramsay Art Prize is a new acquisitive visual arts prize for Australian artists aged below 40. Presented by the AGSA and supported by the James & Diana Ramsay Foundation, it aims to “support and encourage contemporary Australian artists to make their best work at a pivotal moment in their career.” The prize had 21 finalists this year; their submitted works cover a broad set of mediums, including video installations, chromogenic photos and paintings. These works will be exhibited at the Art Gallery of South Australia from May 27 to August 27, 2017.

Crystal Wu is an editorial intern at ArtAsiaPacific.

To read more of ArtAsiaPacific’s articles, visit our Digital Library.