Shenzhen Government Online
Discover futurology art in Guangming’s new exhibition | Until Dec. 15
From: Shenzhen Daily
Updated: 2020-09-23 11:09

As Shenzhen's Guangming District has been chosen for the next stage of the city's scientific development, and the Guangming Science City is expected to become a world-class science center by 2025, a new art exhibition related to futurology echoes the district's mission.


Titled "Futurology of Art," the exhibition at the Art Gallery of the Guangming Culture and Art Center features installations by 27 Chinese artists in a variety of media, such as 3-D animation, robotics, laser and physics. The exhibition is divided into three sections: "Space and Humans," "Post-Human Myths" and "Human-Machine Integration."


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Lyu Liantao's dynamic installation "A Row of Legs." Photos courtesy of Guangming Culture and Art 


"The three parts are in line with the three major domains and trends of new media art," said Zhang Haitao, curator of the exhibition. He added that new media art dealing with the future is derived from contemporary art, but future-oriented art highlights an unfamiliar and uncertain world and contemporary art pays attention to what has happened and what is happening.


There are some inspiring examples of futurology artworks from both established and emerging artists on display at the exhibition. Artist Liu Shuming's installation "Listening From Another Dimension" is interesting. She collected the breathing sounds from women of different ages. Every time a woman's sound is played, a skirt inside a big glass ball installation is blown by wind. The work visualizes the movement of and tension in life.


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Visitors admire Tian Xiaolei's multi-screen video installation "Myth."


Tian Xiaolei's multi-screen video installation "Myth" is an ongoing project he started in 2018. In each screen of the video, there's a human implanted with machines dancing against a backdrop of a strong dazzling color. The artist assumes that the special human beings are the experimental specimens in the future when we will become more bio-diversified and have more choices in deciding our own path of evolution through the implanting of gadgets. Tian said he is interested in the uncertainty of the rapid iteration in this era, the relationship between life, science and technology, and the new species produced by the hybrid age.


Visitors may remember their childhood memories which are overlaid on projected images from artist Zheng Hongchang's installation "The Accordion 1-5." Figurines fabricated by a 3-D printer are integrated into an accordion's bass part, a creation the artist dreamt of as a child. Their shadows are projected onto the walls and move like a toy. "These seemingly unrelated objects are connected as one when they are projected on the wall. It's like the things in our life: Unrelated things are interrelated when you look backward," said Zheng.


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A scene from Miao Xiaochun's "Gyro Dance" video.


Miao Xiaochun's "Gyro Dance" video features an agglomerate of a digital figure's motions at a manic speed. All the figures in Miao's digital art creations are identical bald and naked men whose face images are derived from a 3-D model of Miao himself. These figures are a presentation of the anonymous public and the unknown identity of the artist. It conveys the confusion of the artist towards himself, the existence of body, the presence of thoughts, the material world and the society.


Hu Jieming's video installation made with hatchways and portholes forms both realistic and fantastic settings of his sea images. The installation consists of several ship hatchways with videos showing through portholes. From the video, visitors can see scenes of ocean, buildings above the water and daily objects floating in the water at zero altitude. Hu's combination of new media (videos) and ordinary material (ship hatchways) and high technology and abandoned objects gives power to this artwork.


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Gao Feng's AI interactive installation "AI Garden of Eden."


"Despite the ongoing high-tech revolution, the core of human expectation for the future still lies in eternal dignity and happiness. The trends of futurology art focus on humans' efforts to cope with the looming survival crises and expressing their evolving understanding of existence," said curator Zhang.


Opened Sept. 19, the Guangming Culture and Art Center also has a concert hall, a theater, a library and an urban-planning exhibition hall. Covering 38,000 square meters and with a floor area of 130,000 square meters, the center is the largest multifunctional cultural venue in north Shenzhen.


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Part of Xu Zhongmin's mechanical installation "Egg Shape."


Dates: Until Dec. 15


Hours: 10 a.m.-6 p.m.


Venue: Art Gallery of Guangming Culture and Art Center, Guanguang Road, Guangming District (光明区观光路光明文化艺术中心美术馆)


Metro: Line 6 to Fenghuang Town Station (凤凰城站), Exit B


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