The alien is a complex and
multifaceted construct, interweaving notions of otherness, estrangement, and
the unfamiliar. This exhibition, 《Alien》, curated by gallery artist Yesiyu
Zhao, invites over 40 artists from the Asian diaspora, working globally across
a diversity of media, to explore and articulate the nuanced meanings associated
with the alien and alienation in their myriad forms—spanning cultural, social,
and political contexts.
The term ‘alien’ here transcends the realm of science
fiction, capturing the real and often harsh realities of displacement,
immigration, and the pervasive sense of being an outsider in any environment.
Through their works, these artists interrogate and illuminate the multifarious
dimensions of what it means to be alien in the contemporary world. They offer
insights into the lived experiences and existential challenges faced by those
who navigate, and perhaps even embrace, the changing and conflicting conditions
of being alien.
Developed during the last two
years, the exhibition includes artists from numerous cities in Asia, the US and
Europe. Works have shipped to Miami from Antwerp, Austin, Bangkok, Beijing,
Berlin, Brooklyn, Chicago, Hong Kong, Huangshan, London, Los Angeles, New York,
Newark, Seoul, Shanghai, and Tokyo. The exhibition is a historically
significant one, as the first survey of the Asian diaspora ever in Miami, in a
museum or a gallery. This multi-faceted look at creators from Asia and of
Asian descent is timely as the gallery approaches 20 years of innovation in
conceptual & artistic discoveries.
“Necessary Likeness
I have always been struck, even
tickled, by the forms with which we collectively agree to imagine aliens in
sci-fi and popular culture. Nowhere else are the limits of anthropomorphism so
obvious: we think ourselves so utterly creative to storyboard out a sentient
being with green skin and three eyes and maybe tentacles, yet we possess such a
small capacity for questioning why we’d assume an alien would have skin or
sight or physical corporeality like us at all. This might be the most endearing
-if not ultimately redeeming- habit of humanity: how we cannot help but define
the unknown primarily through imagined similarities.”
- Author Delia Cai
Artists
Dabin Ahn, Amanda Ba, Delia Cai, Shuyi
Cao, HyeGyeong Choi, Zhi Ding, Yuan Fang, Shyama Golden, Asif Hoque, Zhang
Huan, Yirui Jia, Ho Jae Kim, Sung Hwa Kim, Song Kun, Antonia
Kuo, Heidi Lau, John Hyen Lee, Kyungmin Lee, Mike Lee, Sarah
Lee, Susan Lee-Chun, Keita Morimoto, Spun Ngoensritong, Alvin
Ong, Catalina Ouyang, Anna Park, Yanqing Pei, Kong Qian, Hiba
Schahbaz, Pauline Shaw, Su Su, Nadia Waheed, Kaifan Wang, Xiyao
Wang, Lily Wong, Sun Woo, Huidi Xiang, Liu Xin, Xiyadie, Yuri
Yuan, Yesiyu Zhao, Ye Qin Zhu