Exhibition Review: MOBILE M+: INFLATION!: A
(CON)TEMPORARY SCULPTURAL PARK
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Featuring
the works of 7 world-renowned artists, Mobile
M+ Inflation (25 Apr – 6 June 2013) is essentially the first international
contemporary art show curated by M+, the museum for visual culture due to open in
Hong Kong in 2017. A nomadic event created by M+, the mega museum inscribed
within the West Kowloon Cultural District (WKCD) project, it is set within the
grounds of a massive sculpture park currently under development along the West
Kowloon Promenade, adjacent to what is the M+ site itself. The exhibition’s 6 gigantic
inflatable sculptures together with a single performance piece are meant to
ignite Hong
Kong ’s
interest in contemporary art.
Mobile M+ Inflation encompasses essential elements of the
blockbuster show: Whilst some works are provocative, hilarious and bouncing
with energy, others are merely eye-catching simply due to their huge size. Equivalent to a 2-storey building in height, these over-sized inflatables
are capable of both drawing the eye’s attention and creating news sound bites. The
large-scale forms and catchy nicknames - the pig, the poop and the cockroach - helped
create a media buzz before and after the show’s opening. The WKCD Facebook page
has recorded over 10,000 ‘Like’ on the pile of poop and even reported that visitor
numbers amounted to 38,000 just four days into the exhibition. Thus, through an immersive
art experience presented as a lavish feast of beauty, glamour and the
grotesque, the show’s main objective appears to be to draw the Hong Kong public to contemporary
art.
In
the form of a giant suckling pig, House of
Treasures (2013)
by Chinese artist Cao Fei (b. 1978) is installed facing Victoria Harbour
and celebrates the Chinese appetite for love and food. The pig’s tummy and butt
are open, creating passageways filled with pork-cube-like cushions for the
audience to rest on, relax and mingle. The work encourages people to recall and
treasure moments of family gatherings and reunions. House of
Treasures particularly delights spectators as lamps within
its red eyes switch on at night, making the piece blend harmoniously with the
glittering buildings along the famous harbour.
Cao Fei, House of Treasures, 2013
Vinyl-coated nylon fabric,
electric fans
|
Paul Mccarthy, Complex Pile, 2007
Vinyl-coated nylon fabric, electric
fans, rigging
|
Tam Wai Ping, Falling into the Mundane World 2013
Vinyl-coated nylon fabric,
steel structure, electric fans
|
Choi Jeong Hwa, Emptiness is Form, Form is Emptiness, 2013
Vinyl-coated nylon
fabric, electric fans, motor
|
Jeremy Deller, Sacrilege 2012
Paint, vinyl-coated nylon
fabric, zinc-plated anodized steel, electric fans
|
Jiakun Architects / Liu Jiakun, With the Wind 2002 / 2009
Vinyl-coated balloons,
agricultural sun-shade netting, used tires, bamboo chairs
|
Along with
these six soft installations is a performance piece by Argentinian artist Tomás
Saraceno (b. 1973) entitled Poetic Cosmos
of the Breath (2007) which is scheduled
to stage at sunrise periodically during the exhibition period. Saraceno’s experimental
performance goes a step further to explore the role of nature. Here, not just
audience participation, but also nature’s collaboration is key to the
experience of the show, in which a paper-thin foil membrane will be inflated on
the harbour front to produce a startling visual effect. Inspired by the work of
Dominic Michaelis, an English architect and inventor who pioneered the
technology for a solar-powered hot air balloon, the piece is a time-based
experimental solar dome that takes flight only under sunlight. The cancellation
of the first show unfortunately due to bad weather, probably anticipated by the
curators of the show, did let down many enthusiastic participants. Conceived as
an ephemeral event rather than as fixed structure, Poetic Cosmos of the Breath envisages not only the impermanence of
public sculpture, but also new possibilities for connecting humanity to the
natural world.
Mobile M+ Inflation reveals that the M+ team has tried their best
to make art noticeable to the public and that art can be appreciated everywhere
around us. Accompanied
by a series of on-site events ranging from artist talks, workshops to guided
tours, the exhibition has succeeded in generating enthusiasm in the general public
about viewing and participating in art. But as to whether the Hong Kong public will be able to move
away from taking the pig, the poop and the cockroach literally and instead perceive
them as a form of intervention whereby art is manipulated to interrupt and
challenge our usual perceptions, perhaps time will tell.
MOBILE M+: INFLATION!: A
(CON)TEMPORARY SCULPTURAL PARK
25 Apr – 9 June,
2013
Kowloon
Hong
Kong
+852
2200 0210