Angela Su

Last updated
Angela Su 2022 Angela Su 2022.jpg
Angela Su 2022

Angela Su is a Hong Kong artist known for her biomorphic drawings, fictional films and hair embroideries, exploring the imagery of the body through metamorphosis, hybridity and transformation. [1] [2] She is a trained biochemist as well as a visual artist. [3] In 2014, Su was featured in Art Radar on a list of influential Asian female artists making an impact on the international art stage. [4] She represents Hong Kong in the Collateral Event at the 59th International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia, with a solo exhibition titled: Angela Su: Arise, Hong Kong in Venice. [1]

Contents

Biography

Angela Su was born in 1958 in Hong Kong. She graduated from the University of Toronto with a degree in biochemistry in 1990 and from the Ontario College of Art with a visual arts degree in 1994. [5] Her works have been exhibited in the Second CAFAM Biennale, the 17th Biennale of Sydney, at the Saatchi Gallery and the Whitechapel Gallery in London. She published an artist novel called Berty in 2013, [1] and a science fiction anthology Dark Fluid, where she used science fiction as a tool for social justice. [6]

Selected works

The Magnificent Levitation Act of Lauren O (2022)

The Magnificent Levitation Act of Lauren O is a fifteen-minute long pseudo-documentary that presents the story of Su's fictional character, Lauren O, who believes she can levitate, and her involvement with Laden Raven, an activist group catalyzed by the US anti-war movement of the 1960s. The inspirations for the character came from Lauren Olamina, the protagonist from novel Parable of the Sower (1993) by Octavia Butler, together with the feminist activist Bertha Pappenheim. [7]

Mesures et Démesures (2015)

Mesures et Démesures is a six-minute video that begins with images of flowers with a background soundtrack of a regular tapping sound. [8] It consists of pictures of late-19th century psychiatrists, Jean-Martin Charcot, and the tests that he conducted on a patient who suffered from hysteria, a socially constructed disease that led to misuses of medical care and unjustified discrimination. [8]

Hong Kong Bestiary (2015)

The exhibition contains various animals' paintings and focuses on the relationship between humans and animals. Although humans consider animals as living creatures, there are characteristics that define a human and animal differently, but there are resemble between the two. In the exhibition, it is portrayed that the human starts to take advantage of the animals. They intentionally use of the animals' image to solve social, moral, environmental and political issues since the animals cannot speak and fight back. The artworks aim to bring out the underlying thoughts of the animals and let the animals speak to the human.[ citation needed ]

Methods of Art (2015)

Methods of Art is a one-minute video that was created in response to an artist interview conducted by curator Johannes Hedinger for his project Methods of Art (MoA), an international video archive of artist interviews initiated in 2013 in Germany. [9] At the beginning of the video, Su is caught into a hut by a man. Then it starts broadcasting a speech recorded by Su, in which she apologizes for wasting the audience's time to watch her video and her meaningless artworks, which has a lack of wit, absurdity, humor and urgency. [10]

"Hartford Girl and other stories" is a combination of an 11 minute 35 second video and six photographic prints. [11] The work is a multilayered narrative documenting the process of creating the complex, inkless tattoo, composed of 39 lines or "slashes" of text, written freehand on the artist's back. [12] [13] The tattoo refers to the biblical account of the number of lashes received by Jesus prior to his crucifixion. [14] [4] "The Hartford Girl and Other Stories", Su further probes this subject of the experience felt by the human body. This video uses both in the video voiceover and in the text inscribed in the tattoo to be the word's narrative. For the tattoo, those are some prayers that are never completely legible to the audience, indicate an abstraction of the veiled search for forgiveness and recovery. About the video narration, it can clarify the feeling of Hartford Girl and descript the fictional character, random fact, newspaper's report, lyrics and actual self-harmers' testimonies. [15]

If the two main property of tattoo are taken away, then the tattoo is no longer for permanent and decorative. There leaving only painful. "Hartford Girl and other stories" further probes this theme of feeling perception of human body. Also, it focuses on the self-mutilation carried out in present culture, and the complicate meaning that exist inside the mental and the body.[ citation needed ]

In Berty We Trust! (2013)

In her show, Su focuses on a theme of sadomasochism. [12] Su's presented her artworks with animation, ink on drafting film and a book related to a machine named Berty. [16] It was a new illustrated book presented with a set of drawings and a video animation of machine-body hybrids. It told a story of a factory worker who became a serial killer, was raped by a machine and gave birth to an abnormal child. The idea is about the extreme effects caused by over-dependence on technology. The book included Su's drawings, a postscript by the artist Nadim Abbas and an 18,000-word novella created by her Asia Art Archive colleague Mary Lee. [17]

BwO (2011)

BwO, or Body without Organs is an idea introduced by Gilles Deleuze to describe a virtual body without stable structures.[ citation needed ] In her drawings, Su used the concept of pain to influence our organic sensory and to break down the establishment so as to demonstrate the state of "dis-organization". She described the body in an extremely meticulous way, even blood and anatomies were included in her drawing. Su hoped to express her thinking on pleasure in pain by presenting her painful objects and human organs abreast. The contradiction between the painting and the hidden meaning of the drawings challenged the audiences' aesthetic standards, sense of beauty, and underlying desire. [18]

Since 2010, Su has begun adding anatomical components and fantastical instruments into her art series. The artworks were first exhibited at a solo show at Grotto Fine Art in 2011. Simple tools were the main theme of the show. The group of work was combines into a series of machine. At first, Su has started to draw a tool which was a scissor. Then, the drawings have been transformed into some complicated machines. At the end, an assembly line appeared. [17]

The idea of the assembly line was presented in a form of animation which was shown in a dark room at the exhibition. The sound of the work was trying to deliver the concept of "endless torture" and hint the audiences about one of Su's favorite films by creating a mood that was similar to David Lynch's Eraserhead . [17] In the collection, torture machines, human flesh, apparatus are organs were shown. The artworks were exhibited in topographical perspective in order to make them look like the pages in an old textbook. All drawings were in single black ink and pastel on the drafting film. [19]

One woman apartment (2008)

lucanus hermani delisle, ink on drafting film, 60cm x 84cm Lucanus hermani delisle.jpg
lucanus hermani delisle, ink on drafting film, 60cm x 84cm

It is a failed project that was due to take place in 2008 but Su abandoned it to volunteer with an NGO. [20]

Paracelsus' Garden (2008)

The exhibition consisted of ink drawings and embroideries. For the ink drawings, Su showed her thoughts on the human skeleton in raw anatomical renderings. Her embroideries were presented with juxtaposition and design. Su brought dreams and alchemy together to form a mysterious vision of nature and the human existence. Su combined her biological background with compositions in putting elements of alchemical and fantasy nature together. Her collection contained flowers, insects, and human figure. They aimed to present a personal response to the symbolic, iconic and figural self. [21]

Fascinations (2005)

This exhibition was a collaborative work created by four artists, Suki Chan, Melanie Jackson, Leung Meeping and Angela Su. The artwork inquires ideas of collective memory, migration, labor, or race. The main idea of the project reflects to the definition of "fascination". All four artworks records indistinct or personal narratives through different mediums which included fabric, film, video, photography and sound to investigate a scope of human interactions or contentions. [22]

Microviolence (2003)

In April 2003, during the SARS outbreak in Hong Kong, a woman dialed the major Chinese organizations in Toronto and proposed a comment to blame the local Chinese. She thought they have lived like rats and eaten like pigs, and the dirty disease was spread by them.

In order to trigger the discussion about this kind of racial discrimination, Su took the original statement made by that woman and presented each letter within the sentence as bacteria cultures. The artwork does not reveal whether it agrees with the discrimination to the Chinese or not. It provides rooms of imagination and judgement to the audiences. [23]

De Humani Corporis Fabrica (2002)

De Humani Corporis Fabrica was a series with seven books written by Andreas Vesalius. It was first published in 1543. He precisely illustrated different parts of the human body which then facilitated the development of scientific anatomy. With the same title, the exhibition proposed to explain the human body by combining the scientific expression with artistic representation. In the art show, science and visual art are combined together to produce new images about the symbolic comprehension of the body. [24]

Exhibitions

Year [1] ExhibitionLocationType
2024Angela Su: MelencoliaWallach Art Gallery, New YorkSolo
2023Angela Su proudly presents: Lauren O—The Greatest Levitator in the Polyhedric Cosmos of Time [25] M+, Hong KongSolo
2022Angela Su: Arise, Hong Kong in Venice [26] the 59th International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia, Hong Kong Pavilion, Venice, ItalySolo
2021So long, thanks again for the fishLevyhalli, Suomenlinna, HelsinkiGroup
2020Sala10Museo Universitario Arte Contemporáneo, MexicoGroup
2020100 Drawings from NowThe Drawing Center, New YorkGroup
2020Meditations in an EmergencyUllens Center for Contemporary Art, BeijingGroup
2019Contagious Cities: Far Away, Too CloseTai Kwun, Hong Kong [27] Group
2019WovenBooth: Blindspot Gallery, Frieze London, London, UKSolo
2019Artists’ Film InternationalWhitechapel Gallery, LondonGroup
2017The Afterlife of Rosy LeaversBlindspot Gallery, Hong KongSolo
2017Pro(s)thesisAcademy of Fine Arts Vienna, AustriaGroup
2014The 2nd CAFAM Biennale: The Invisible HandCAFA Art Museum, ChinaGroup
2013In Berty We Trust!Gallery EXIT, Hong KongSolo
2012Stigmatics – The Hartford Girl and Other StoriesGallery EXIT, Hong KongSolo
2011A Brief History of TimeRBS Gallery, MalaysiaSolo
2011BwOGrotto Fine Art, Hong KongSolo
2010The 17th Biennale of SydneyMuseum of Contemporary Art, AustraliaGroup
2008Paracelsus' GardenGrotto Fine Art, Hong KongSolo
2006SenninbariJendala Gallery at the Esplanade, Singapore Fringe Festival, SingaporeSolo
2003MircoviolenceFringe Club, Hong KongSolo
2002De Humani Corporis FabricaGoethe-Institut Hong KongSolo

Related Research Articles

Dame Sonia Dawn Boyce is a British Afro-Caribbean artist and educator, living and working in London. She is a Professor of Black Art and Design at University of the Arts London. Boyce's research interests explore art as a social practice and the critical and contextual debates that arise from this area of study. Boyce has been closely collaborating with other artists since 1990 with a focus on collaborative work, frequently involving improvisation and unplanned performative actions on the part of her collaborators. Boyce's work involves a variety of media, such as drawing, print, photography, video, and sound. Her art explores "the relationship between sound and memory, the dynamics of space, and incorporating the spectator". To date, Boyce has taught Fine Art studio practice for more than 30 years in several art colleges across the UK.

Liu Wei is a Chinese artist based in Beijing. He works in varied media – video, installation, drawing, sculpture, and painting – with no uniting stylistic tendency, though the Saatchi Gallery finds a uniting theme of "a sentiment of excess, corruption, and aggression reflective of cultural anxiety". Conceptualism, satire, and humor are the hallmarks of his works.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Shu Lea Cheang</span> Taiwanese-American artist and filmmaker

Shu Lea Cheang is a Taiwanese-American artist and filmmaker who lived and worked in New York City in the 1980s and 90s, until relocating to Europe in 2000. Cheang received a BA in history from the National Taiwan University in 1976 and an MA in Cinema Studies from New York University in 1979. Since the 1980s, as a multimedia and new-media artist, she has navigated topics of ethnic stereotyping, sexual politics, and institutional oppression with her radical experimentations in digital realms. She drafts sci-fi narratives in her film scenario and artwork imagination, crafting her own “science” fiction genre of new queer cinema. From homesteading cyberspace in the 1990s to her current retreat to post net-crash BioNet zone, Cheang takes on viral love, bio hack in her current cycle of works.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Carole Feuerman</span> American sculptor

Carole A. Feuerman is an American sculptor and artist working in hyperrealism. Feuerman utilizes a variety of media including resin, marble, and bronze. She has been included in exhibitions at the Smithsonian Institution's National Portrait Gallery; and Palazzo Strozzi in Florence, Italy.

Wong Chi Hang Sara is a Hong Kong-based visual artist and landscape architect. Wong graduated with a BA degree in Fine Arts from the Chinese University of Hong Kong in 1992 and an MA in Landscape Architecture from the University of Hong Kong.

Shizu Saldamando, is an American visual artist. Her work merges painting and collage in portraits that often deal with social constructs of identity and subcultures. Saldamando also works in video, installation and performance art. She has been featured in numerous exhibitions, has attained accolades like that of Wanlass Artist in Residence, and is a successful writer, tattoo artist, and social activist.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Phoebe Man</span> Hong Kong artist

Phoebe Man is a conceptual artist, media sculptor and independent curator based in Hong Kong. Her works have been shown in local and international art exhibitions, including Venice Biennale, Shanghai Biennale, Gwangju Biennale, and European Media Art Festival. Her works were included in Asian Art, The Art of Modern Chinaand Hong Kong Eye: Hong Kong Contemporary Art.

Lani Maestro is a Filipino-Canadian artist who divides her time between France and Canada. She works in installation, sound, video, bookworks and writing. From 1990 to 1994 Maestro was co-founder/co-publisher and designer of HARBOUR Magazine of Art and Everyday Life, a journal of artworks and writings by artists, writers and theorists based in Montreal.

Tsang Kin-Wah is a visual artist based in Hong Kong. His earlier work, particularly his "wallpaper art", was known for its combination of beautiful illustration and painting, and for its use of profane or obscene words. More recently, he has explored topics related to politics and religion via large-form, multi-media installations that combine music, video and light projections.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ying Miao</span>

Miao Ying is a contemporary artist and writer who is based in New York City and Shanghai, best known for her research based projects addressing her Stockholm Syndrome relationship with the Chinese internet such as The Blind Spot (2007), Chinternet Plus (2016), and online culture inside the Great Firewall. Her works inhabit multiple forms including paintings, websites, installations, machine learning software, VR and videos; highlight the attempts to discuss mainstream technology and contemporary consciousness and its impact on our daily lives, along with the new modes of politics, aesthetics and consciousness created during the representation of reality through technology.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Samson Young</span> Hong Kong artist

Samson Young is a Hong Kong artist, working primarily in the mediums of sound performance and installations.

Yuan Jai is a visual artist based in Taiwan. She is known for her experimentation with representation in Chinese ink painting. The artist studied Chinese painting and received her doctorate in Belgium, focusing on the preservation of cultural artifacts. After she returned to Taiwan, she worked as a conservator in the Department of Antiquities at the National Palace Museum in Taipei for more than thirty years. Her artistic career started to flourish as she was surrounded by Chinese old masters' paintings, jades, textiles, and ceramics at the museum. Her work draws from antique prototypes and masters' paintings, and interprets visual traditions by incorporating geometric patterns, vibrant colors, and daily experiences.

Kiri Dalena is a visual artist, filmmaker and human rights activist who lives and works in the Philippines. Her work deals with issues of political and social injustice, drawing from events in Philippine history.

Canton Express (廣東快車) was an exhibition curated by Hou Hanru in 2003. The exhibition was part of Z.O.U. — Zone of Urgency at the 50th Venice Biennale and was exhibited in the Arsenale in Venice. The exhibition contained works from four artist groups and was the first time artists from the Pearl River Delta region of China participated in a major international event. It was a reflection on the rapid industrialization and urbanization of the region throughout the 1980s and 1990s.

Ho Sin Tung is a visual artist who lives and works in Hong Kong.

Young In Hong is a visual artist from Seoul, Korea, based in Bristol, England. Hong graduated with an MA and a PhD in Art from Goldsmith College in London UK in 2012. From 1992 to 1998, she studied Sculpture at Seoul National University. Hong currently works from her studio at Spike Island in Bristol and is represented by PKM Gallery in Seoul. She teaches at Bath School of Art as Reader in Performance and Textiles.

Munkhtsetseg Jalkhaajav also known as Mugi, is one of the leading contemporary artists of Mongolia. Her interdisciplinary works incorporate paintings, sculptures, collages, performance and media art.

The 59th Venice Biennale is an international contemporary art exhibition held between April and November 2022. The Venice Biennale takes place biennially in Venice, Italy. Artistic director Cecilia Alemani curated its central exhibition.

Duan Jianyu is a prominent contemporary visual artist from China and writer. The artist is primarily known for her surrealist-style of paintings that draw from a range of art histories, including European-American modernism, Chinese ink painting, and Chinese Socialist Realism.

Firenze Lai Ching Yin is an artist, an illustrator, an editorial designer and the co-founder of Hulahoop Gallery of Hong Kong. She is a graduate from the painting program of Hong Kong Art School (HKAS). Her works frequently depict anonymous figures as subjects, and explore the issues of psychological landscapes, the mind and body, human relationships, collectiveness, and social experiences and space. Her paintings were exhibited in various international locations including the 10th Shanghai Biennale (2014), the 2015 New Museum Triennial, and the 57th Venice Biennale (2017), as well as different local venues such as Para Site and Tai Kwun Contemporary. Another medium that she worked closely with are sketches and drawings, which she compiled in several published monographs along with selections of her paintings. Her illustrations are also known to be featured regularly in Mao Pao Weekly.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Angela Su to represent Hong Kong at Venice Biennale". artreview.com. Retrieved 2022-03-26.
  2. "Angela Su: Arise, Hong Kong in Venice, Collateral Event of the 59th International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia |". West Kowloon Cultural District. Retrieved 2022-03-26.
  3. "The Assembly Line (2013) - Angela Su | Objects | M+". www.mplus.org.hk. Retrieved 2022-03-26.
  4. 1 2 C.A. Xuan Mai Ardia (7 March 2014). "Seven Influential Women Artists From Asia Pacific". Art Radar. Archived from the original on 14 April 2016. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  5. "Angela Su - Blindspot Gallery". Blindspot Gallery. Retrieved 2018-03-26.
  6. "Angela Su: Arise, Hong Kong in Venice, Collateral Event of the 59th International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia |". West Kowloon Cultural District. Retrieved 2022-03-26.
  7. "ArtAsiaPacific: Angela Su: Elevating Extremes". artasiapacific.com. Retrieved 2024-03-02.
  8. 1 2 Enid Tsui (15 December 2015). "With a clinical view, Hong Kong art show challenges how we see our bodies". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  9. "Methods of Art".
  10. "MOA Angela Su". Archived from the original on 2017-11-29. Retrieved 2016-04-04.
  11. "Angela Su《The Hartford Girl and Other Stories》". GALLERY EXIT 安全口. Retrieved 2018-03-26.
  12. 1 2 Enid Tsui (12 January 2016). "Artist inspired by Occupy joins Sham Shui Po market fight". South China Morning Post . Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  13. POSTISM (10 May 2013). "Angela Su's Wunderkammer". FRAMED. Retrieved 14 March 2018.
  14. "The Hartford Girl and Other Stories". Archived from the original on 2016-04-19. Retrieved 2016-04-05.
  15. "Angela Su's blog - The Hartford Girl and Other Stories".
  16. RTHK (10 December 2013). "The Works" . Retrieved 22 March 2016.
  17. 1 2 3 Edmund Lee (4 December 2013). "Arts preview: Artist Angela Su draws on the Victorian age". South China Morning Post. Retrieved 25 March 2016.
  18. Asiart Archive. "Angela Su: BwO". Event occurs at 2011. Archived from the original on 2016-04-18. Retrieved 2016-04-04.
  19. Asiart Archive. "Angela Su: BwO". Event occurs at 2011. Archived from the original on 2016-04-18. Retrieved 2016-04-04.
  20. "One woman apartment=2008".
  21. "Angela Su: Paracelsus' Garden". 2008.
  22. Asiart Archive (2005). "Fascinations". Archived from the original on 2016-04-27. Retrieved 2016-04-20.
  23. Asiart Archive (2003). "MicroViolence - Installation by Angela Su". Archived from the original on 2016-04-27. Retrieved 2016-04-16.
  24. Asiart Archive (2012). "de Humani Corporis fabrica". Archived from the original on 2016-04-26. Retrieved 2016-04-19.
  25. "Angela Su proudly presents: Lauren O—The Greatest Levitator in the Polyhedric Cosmos of Time | M+". www.mplus.org.hk. Retrieved 2024-03-02.
  26. "Angela Su: Arise, Hong Kong in Venice | M+". www.mplus.org.hk. Retrieved 2023-02-20.
  27. "Contagious Cities: Far Away, Too Close | Tai Kwun". www.taikwun.hk. Retrieved 2022-03-26.