ISAAC CHONG WAI
Solo Exhibition at Zilberman, Berlin
WHAT IS THE FUTURE IN THE PAST?
AND WHAT IS THE PAST IN THE FUTURE?
OPENING: Thursday, September 5, 6 p.m.
PERFORMANCE: pietas, 7.30-8 p.m., with
Saori Hala and Nobutaka Shomura
Photo by CHROMA Istanbul
Zilberman Gallery, Berlin is pleased to announce the exhibition “What is the future in the past? And what is the past in the future?” by Berlin and Hong Kong based artist Isaac Chong Wai, marking the artist’s first solo show in Berlin. The opening will take place on September 5 at 6 p.m. and the performance “pietas” (2019) at 7:30 p.m. on the same day. The exhibition runs from September 6 until November 9.
Contemplating imaginary pasts and looking at possible futures from the point of the present, the drawings, sculptures, site-specific installations and performances of the artist deal with the concealed perils of the public, the hidden available to our gaze. While normative narratives practice a certain rhetoric, Chong’s works beckon us through dilemmas; turning assumed truths on their heads and inviting us to participate in dialogues of vulnerability and resilience. His pieces often play with time, memory and propose performance as a commemorative tool for the future. In Chong’s work violence and poetry intermingle, while the artist visits the history of Germany. Taking historical sites as the spaces of memory, Chong addresses complex research on how the body transforms in public space and uses alternating mediums to reflect on layers of historical memory.
In most of the pieces of the show, we see the artist performing—using his breath to cover the window, painting on mirror to create a moon, dating a guy, covering and casting the bullet holes—except the opening performance “pietas” (2019). Different from how normally we perceive the image of Pietà in the Christian world, in Chong’s version the person who is holding the dead body is the one who is crying and two bodies shift this role repetitively. When the dead is crying instead of the alive, what does it tell about our world, about its history and rhythms?
In the video-stills “Neue Wache” (2015), we see Isaac Chong Wai from the back, covering the im-age of the Neue Wache—exhibiting the renowned sculpture “Mutter mit totem Sohn” (1937-1938) by Käthe Kollwitz—from the building of Berlin’s Maxim Gorki Theatre. Slowly, the breath of the artist covers the back facade of the Neue Wache. The breath leaves its traces on the window; what we see is only an after effect of the breath. People are gone and we still desire to preserve the past—as our breath floats away and we only see its traces on the window, hiding vague memories.
The video “The Silent Wall” (2014) depicts Chong trying to cover the bullet holes on a wall with his hands in the city of Sarajevo, recalling the daily quota of bullets that the soldiers had to shoot. As a result, some delivered their shots onto the same wall, instead of people. Which bullet hole belongs to the soldier endeavoring not to murder and which one ended up in the wall after piercing a body? After this experience, Chong discovered remaining bullet holes also on the walls of Berlin, which led to the video exhibited in the show, “The Silent Wall—Berlin” (2019). Chong’s fragile amorphous glass sculptures “Missing Space” (2019)—with GPS numbers mounted on to find the locations—are the casts of these holes, dragging a hidden past into now. The display recalls the ideas of temporality, randomness, illusion of instability, danger and susceptibleness, because of their material, because of the way they are still but unstable.
Magical daily moments find their place in Isaac Chong Wai’s work, without the control of the artist to create such moments. For instance, the piece “I Dated a Guy in Buchenwald” (2013), depicts the words of Chong’s date, a framed text on paper, written after their tourist visit to the concentration camp in Buchenwald. The act of two men kissing commemorates the gays persecuted and executed during WWII. “Then I knew there was hope for I had just experienced human warmth where I least expected to”, writes François—the artist’s date, remembering how people suffered and how time allows desires to exist in new ways in privileged parts of the world.
The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue with contributions by Pauline Doutreluingne, Caroline Ha Thuc, and Lotte Laub.
Isaac Chong Wai (b. 1990, China) works and lives in Berlin and Hong Kong. Chong graduated from Academy of Visual Arts at Hong Kong Baptist University with a BA in Visual Arts and Bauhaus-Universität in Weimar, Germany, with a MFA in Public Art and New Artistic Strategies. His most recent solo exhibitions include: Is the World Your Friend? (Blindspot Gallery, Hong Kong, 2019), An Artistic Archive of Borders (Kunstraum München, Munich, Germany, 2018), Future of the Past – Past of the Future (Goethe-Institut Hong Kong, Hong Kong, 2018), What is the future in the past? And what is the past in the future? (Bauhaus Museum, Weimar, Germany, 2016). His selected group exhibitions include: Living Sound—Expanding the extramusical (Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA), Taipei, Taiwan, 2019), The Racing Will Continue, The Dancing Will Stay (Guangdong Times Museum, Guangzhou, China, 2019), Imaginary Bauhaus Museum (Schiller Museum, Weimar, Germany, 2019), M+ Live Art Audience As Performer (M+ Museum, Hong Kong, 2018), The D-Tale: Video Art from the Pearl River Delta (Times Art Center, Berlin, Germany, 2018), KOTODAMA (Para Site, Hong Kong, 2018), Forecast Forum (Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin, Germany, 2017), Moscow International Biennale for Young Art, A Time for Dreams (National Centre for Contemporary Arts (NCCA), Moscow Museum of Modern Art (MMOMA) and Museum of Moscow, Moscow, Russia, 2014).