Guan Xiao | “Wake Up in A House Called Season” @ Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler

2021.11.13-2022.01.15

    Antenna Space is delighted to announce Guan Xiao’s solo exhibition Wake Up in A House Called Season will be open on November 13, 2021 at Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler. The exhibition will last until January 15, 2022.

    No flooring is installed at the front of the stage. Instead, two sheets of felt are laid in place. A bright red color is warmly reflected in the drum skin of the samisen, and on the elegant hands of the fiddler. A slender stand made of paulownia wood is engraved with the seven treasures sashiko pattern. The audience sits facing each other on both sides of the felt carpet.

    The Grandmaster sits at the Kamiza, while the second master sits on a lower seat. Further down are the young master Ogawa and other men and women: the men on the right side and the women on the left. The performance hasn’t started yet. The masters are softly discussing. The performance at the ceremony ended just a minute ago, while the guests, with their heads lowered and bodies reclined, are whispering gossip about others or today’s repertoire, with those sitting next to them in a cordial though inattentive manner.

    The snow that started at noon has bent the pine trees in the courtyard. The bamboo, cypress and podocarpus are also laden with snow. Intermittent waves of sounds flutter like the falling snow in the courtyard, piling up in the room and warming up. Suddenly, a stream of chords sweeps across like the sound of a gavel loud and clear, the second master’s hefty voice breaks through the roomful of murmurs and slices open a space of silence.

    At this very moment in the courtyard, Kikachick steps towards the snow-covered stage, while a faint tinge of pink reflected from the lights under the deep blue dusk shimmers on its icy surface.

    Story of Kikachick
    Guan Xiao
     
    All things overlap in a cycle continuously, and the future is not a noun about time, but an unknown adjective. The ancient and modern, seriousness and humor, the technological and the prehistoric coexist on the same plane, despite various human attempts to neatly compartmentalize them. Guan Xiao seeks to uncover the past that exists in the future and vice versa.

    Any pair of two supposedly contradictory entities can be equalized, reversed, or resolved from a certain angle. Deeply influenced by David Mitchell’s novel Cloud Atlas and Roberto Bolaño’s 2666, Guan Xiao tries to catalyze conflict between pairs of divergent materials, as if to encourage them to form a (contentious) relationship in order to free them from their original context. During such conflict, the elements realize their mutual transformation that is materially inscribed into the works, irrevocably changing their meaning. Any structure or material used carries within itself the germ of its opposing force that completes or disturbs its equilibrium.

    Side A

    Kikachick Is Stepping towards the Snow-Covered Stage, while A Faint Tinge of Pink Reflected from the Lights under the Deep Blue Dusk Is Shimmering on Its Icy Surface (2021) is staged on tatami mats. Round cherries are scattered on the mat, possibly offering themselves to be cut into soft and juicy flesh, decorated with smooth, black pits inside. Motorcycle fuel tanks topping the cherries extend their industrial arms toward the viewers, like creatures wanting to be picked up. This combination makes the concept of artificiality redundant, as the split between “fake” and “authentic” ceases to be relevant.

    Guan Xiao finds wonder in the industry of agriculture. With agriculture, she speaks of the magic (witchcraft and science) that lies not in the development of new products, but the possibility of life. The produce from agriculture is life in itself and sustains and regenerates life beyond. Fruit is the culmination of this possibility, an ultimate readymade, found piled in stores in large quantities, manufactured in controlled immaculateness.

    Ceramics is often thought of as a traditional material, in opposition to industrialized sharpness, precision and repeatability. In Dark eyes as dark as the eyes (2021), a protruding ceramic nose, along with jet black rims constitute an ever-shifting portrait, as if the gallery walls could gaze back.

    Side B

    Two Table-Like Sculptures, Each Called Lotus Leaf (2021) are present in the glow of light green. These tables are formed with lattice patterns that mimic leaves, light and hollow like paper-cut works. The sculptures atop are based on two different tree root forms spliced together vertically, like inherently crossbred creatures that inhabit a calm outdoors.

    For Guan Xiao, the dichotomy of inside/outside is consistently unstable. At once, the glowing, colored rooms indicate a synthetic notion of warm indoors and a vivid, green outdoors, or perhaps a luscious watermelon. The works on view are mutant spawns of traditional sculptures, as well as life forms whose boundaries never stop leaking.

    (source: Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler)

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