
Still from Invisible Cities series, Taiparis York, 2008, Tsui Kuang-yu, Courtesy of the Artist and Eslite Gallery, Taipei.

Still from Invisible Cities series, Sealevel Leaker, 2006, Tsui Kuang-yu, Courtesy of the Artist and Eslite Gallery, Taipei.

Jung Yeondoo, still from Handmade Memories series, 6x6 Manor, 2008, Courtesy of Kukje Gallery, Seoul, & Tina Kim Gallery, New York.

Jung Yeondoo, still from Handmade Memories series, Legend, 2008, Courtesy of Kukje Gallery, Seoul, & Tina Kim Gallery, New York. |
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Spencer Museum of Art
The University of Kansas
1301 Mississippi Street
785-864-4710
Lawrence
Kress Gallery
Extra/Ordinary:
Video Art from Asia
October 24, 2009-
February 14, 2010
Extra/Ordinary assembles recent work by video artists working in China, Korea, Japan, Taiwan, and Afghanistan — all of whom share a common interest in the meaning of ordinary, day-to-day lives, especially within the context of Asia, where an immense reevaluation of historical consciousness and cultural practices is occurring under the guise of “development.”
Extra/Ordinary: Video Art from Asia, investigates new ways of transforming familiar experiences and daily routines into moments of expanded meaning, contemplation, and humorous reflection. By repositioning constructed notions of the “everyday” as cinematic recreations, comical interventions, or meditative actions, this exhibition explores the imaginative potential embedded in the ordinary stuff of life.
Organized by SMA curator of Asian art Kris Imants Ercums, Extra/Ordinary features recent video work by artists from across Asia: The Xijing Men’s Collective — Chen Shaoxiong (China), Gimhongsok (Korea), and Ozawa Tsuyoshi (Japan) — bring new meaning to “play” in their alternate world of Olympic competition; in Invisible Cities (2005-2008) Taiwanese artist Tsui Kuang-yu creates action videos that blur “correct behavior” in urban environments; three short videos by Tokyo-based Izumi Taro offer an odd realm of comical daydreams; Lida Abdul seeks healing in the spatial realities of war-torn Afghanistan; and Korea’s cine-magician, “Mr. Wonderful” himself, Jung Yeondoo, produces sweeping vignettes at the confluence of remembrance and imagination in Handmade Memories (2008).
“Together, these artists uncover the potential of daily experience and explore the material stuff of the world as mutable and laden with potential,” Ercums says. “The use of moving images in this exhibition to restore a lost memory, capture the present, or remake life through cinematic effect, further reflects the fleeting qualities that make the everyday so extraordinary. In the process, ordinary moments are uprooted, transformed into wondrous encounters and, through the ‘poetics of noticing,’ restored as artifacts of memory and meaning.”

Still from Xijing Olympic Competitions, 2008, Xijing Men’s Collective (Chen Shaoxiong, Gimhongsok, Tsuyoshi Ozawa), Courtesy of the Artists. |