
-
- Cedric Van Parys is an artist.
THE KIND STRANGER (group)
OVERVIEW
Date | ... closedAug 24, 2019 - Oct 20, 2019 |
---|---|
Venue(s) |
UNArt Center (Shanghai, China) |
Curator(s) | Long Iris, Yan Xiaodong |
Artist(s) | Bi Rongrong, Ding Li, Nick Ervinck, Feng Bingyi, FFF2116, Fu Fengyuan & Lin Qin, Louisa Galiardi, Geng Jianyi, Rena Giesecke, Guo Cheng, Hu Jieming, Hua Xing, Ji Wenyu & Zhu Weibin, Jin Shan, Hefin Jones, Maya Kramer, Marc Lee, Li Shan, Liao Yijun, Lin Ke, Liu Yi b.1981, Liu Ren, Yutaka Makino, Onformative, RMBit, Fito Segrera, Shi Zhiying, Shi Yong, Su Chang, Cedric Van Parys, Wu Yiming, Xiao Jiang, Xu Zhe, Xu Wenkai, Xu Vivian, Yin Yi, Zhang Ding, Zhang Liaoyuan, Zhou Chen |
Organizer(s) |
UNArt Center (Shanghai, China) |
EXHIBITION SYNOPSIS
About The Kind StrangerUNArt Center will present its opening show "The Kind Stranger " from August 23, 2019 to October 20, 2019. The Center is located in the former site of Dongchang Cinema, the first of its kind in Pudong. It is striving to become an international communication platform for technology, art and education.
43 works from 37 artists are exhibited in the show, covering different forms such as painting, installation, photography, video, performance, etc. All of them are either from or base in Shanghai, and all the works are made between 2008 and 2018.
Titled as "The Kind Stranger”, the show aims to reflect and to some degree respond to the new conditions and scenarios of contemporary human society driven by the accelerating technological revolution. The entire exhibition is based on a fictional scenario: “The Kind Stranger”, as the protagonist of the story, is a character who lives “post-singularity”. The exhibition is reminiscent of an investigative scene in which the “private collections” of this “kind stranger”, whether in physical or digital forms, are uncovered. The site remains ambiguous in its temporal or spatial anchor, whilst inviting the audiences to locate, even orient the items, the text, the sound and vibe, even him/herself, as part of the story to enjoy a psychological retreat from the year 2019, and the city Shanghai
Humanistic concepts had played their roles alongside, or intertwined with the evolving progress of our technical environment. The so-called “humanistic” and “technological” were not to be considered separately, instead, as parties that co-exist and balance each other within a larger dynamic historical flow. Yet, we seem to have entered a historical episode in which discussions of technological acceleration and singularity are engendering new peripheries and balances of the two parties. Hence, the humanism coordinates need to be interrogated for us to still orient: can it go towards the same direction as before, or a radical transformation is on the horizon?
Some futurologists have put that the human society is reaching the very “end stage” of its existence. Be it a prophet or warning, we might need to reconsider, how we - both on the individual and collective level - can be prepared for the upcoming “new era”: the apocalyptical, the trans-human, or the age of Gaia in Latour’s terms. Would the “new era” be truly “new”?
The exhibition does not attempt to provide any solid answer for these interrogations, but as a cultural event, it may still tap on the situation that we’re all immersed in: a time of significant transitions, something we all have to go through. The exhibition touches on the discussion of “new cognitive capabilities”, as a positive response to this transitional time.
About Dongchang Cinema
Dongchang Cinema is located at No. 150 North Nanquan Road in the Pudong New Area; it is one of the rare old-fashioned theaters in Shanghai. It was officially opened in 1954, and in the 1980s, Dongchang Cinema debuted the first widescreen in Pudong and soon entered its peak operational period. With a packed interior and crowded exterior of the movie hall, ticket buyers lined up overnight in this unprecedented popularity. A mere decade later in the 1990s, as the Pudong New Area teemed with new cinemas replete with multiple rooms and advanced projection equipment, the antiquated Dongchang Cinema soon fell out of favor with the public. After closing for a decade, the Dongchang Cinema operations were resurrected by Shanghai Pudong Media Group in 2014. Later the name was changed to E.S.A. Space.
About E.S.A. Space
(formerly Dongchang Cinema)
After a five-year revamp project, the first cinema in Pudong, Shanghai was upgraded to include a new experience zone that features public cultural service facilities, an art center, a multi-functional e-sports competition, and a video gallery. The total indoor area is 2,000 square meters. Three core themes throughout the space are art, education, and interactive entertainment. From August 2019 onwards, the E.S.A. Space will be open to the public throughout the day.
Editorial team members
Art YAN, Iris LONG, BAI Zhifei, ZHENG Yunhan, LIU Jing, ZHANG Yingying,CHEN Xian