Channeller, Interstate
Projects, New
York
December 14 – January 27, 2018/19
Opening Reception December 14, 6-9pm
Flesh-colored surfaces envelop Laurie Kang’s
coiling sculptures. Composed of flexible metal tracks, photographic paper and
film, the twisting structure loosely frames the media creating a series of
deconstructive, ambiguous vistas. A practice of material misuse and boundary
transgression, Kang uses industrial materials in a sensitive way to probe
definitions of body.
The sculptures that cut through the space are
pliable; the metal portion is a skeleton that guides the work in multiple,
associative directions. Viewable from each side and able to be walked through,
the question of negative space is null; they elude what is interior, exterior,
context or content. By extension, the viewer is implicated in their own unfixed
spatial relationship to the work.
In turning the ‘body’ of the sculpture inside
out and repositioning its parts, Kang works at the boundaries that limit how
bodies are understood. The references to interiority locate her work in
non-binary spaces where structures around body politics can be questioned and
reimagined (1). This is materialized through the photographic paper and film
which will continuously change as they are exposed to the environmental light
at Interstate Projects. Kang is interested in the potential of material that is
‘misused’, and through this process, suggests working through -as opposed to
within- the structures we critique (2).
The sculptures are not singular, finite bodies.
Referring to them as “mutated gardens” or “frayed double helixes” her process
of building, weaving, imaging and tearing is deeply personal, and subtly cites
the multiplicity of knowledge she has inherited from her familial matriarchs.
In the presumed gaps of consciousness between generations and places, Kang sees
a space where varied untraceable sites of labor from multiple bodies can
commune, and transgress boundaries together.
- Magdalyn Asimakis
1) Kang references Trinh Minh-ha’s questioning
of ‘voids’ as negative space, instead considering it as an area of productivity
and spirituality. In Minh-Ha, Trinh, Not You/Like You: Post-Colonial Women and
the Interlocking Questions of Identity and Difference, 1997.
2) A reference to Haraway,Donna J., Staying with
the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene, 2016.
With thanks to the Ontario Arts Council and the Canada Council for the Arts for their support in this exhibition.
Channeller, Interstate
Projects, New
York
December 14 – January 27, 2018/19
Opening Reception December 14, 6-9pm
Flesh-colored surfaces envelop Laurie Kang’s
coiling sculptures. Composed of flexible metal tracks, photographic paper and
film, the twisting structure loosely frames the media creating a series of
deconstructive, ambiguous vistas. A practice of material misuse and boundary
transgression, Kang uses industrial materials in a sensitive way to probe
definitions of body.
The sculptures that cut through the space are
pliable; the metal portion is a skeleton that guides the work in multiple,
associative directions. Viewable from each side and able to be walked through,
the question of negative space is null; they elude what is interior, exterior,
context or content. By extension, the viewer is implicated in their own unfixed
spatial relationship to the work.
In turning the ‘body’ of the sculpture inside
out and repositioning its parts, Kang works at the boundaries that limit how
bodies are understood. The references to interiority locate her work in
non-binary spaces where structures around body politics can be questioned and
reimagined (1). This is materialized through the photographic paper and film
which will continuously change as they are exposed to the environmental light
at Interstate Projects. Kang is interested in the potential of material that is
‘misused’, and through this process, suggests working through -as opposed to
within- the structures we critique (2).
The sculptures are not singular, finite bodies.
Referring to them as “mutated gardens” or “frayed double helixes” her process
of building, weaving, imaging and tearing is deeply personal, and subtly cites
the multiplicity of knowledge she has inherited from her familial matriarchs.
In the presumed gaps of consciousness between generations and places, Kang sees
a space where varied untraceable sites of labor from multiple bodies can
commune, and transgress boundaries together.
- Magdalyn Asimakis
1) Kang references Trinh Minh-ha’s questioning
of ‘voids’ as negative space, instead considering it as an area of productivity
and spirituality. In Minh-Ha, Trinh, Not You/Like You: Post-Colonial Women and
the Interlocking Questions of Identity and Difference, 1997.
2) A reference to Haraway,Donna J., Staying with
the Trouble: Making Kin in the Chthulucene, 2016.
With thanks to the Ontario Arts Council and the Canada Council for the Arts for their support in this exhibition.