Cao Fei‘s Utopia comes to TheNewDowse

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“Second Life is a lab, a world lab, but it consists in a huge global economic system. It brings us business and democracy, at the same time with feelings and culture. We can’t avoid capitalism’s wave; at the same time, we can’t avoid Communist aspirations in our heart. This world is not only dualistic, we’re inconsistent. Communism is our Utopia, Second Life is our E-topia . . . SL is our mirror, it tells us the truth.”—Cao Fei

TheNewDowse is pleased to stage Utopia, an exhibition of work by prominent Chinese artist Cao Fei . Cao Fei is one of the key figures of a new generation of Chinese artists too young to have had any real engagement with either the Cultural Revolution or the Tiananmen Square Incident. Her work responds to China’s rapid urbanisation, its giddying pace of social and economic development.

Cao Fei became famous for her video Cosplayers (2004), which documented a subculture where people dress-up in elaborate costumes modeled after those of video-game superheroes, and perform choreographed battles. Their fantasy is played out against the rural outskirts of Guangzhou, where cows roam in front of skyscrapers. Afterwards, the cosplayers return home to assume everyday lives: eating dinner, watching TV.

Cao Fei followed this with Whose Utopia (2006), which she filmed in a factory in the Pearl River Delta region, which has experienced massive economic growth. The predominantly young factory workers come from around the country to work there, lured by opportunities. Whose Utopia contrasts the harsh reality of their repetitive manual labour with poetic moments imagined and performed by them as ballerinas and guitarists.

Since 2007 Cao Fei has been working online in Second Life under the guise of her avatar China Tracy (with her platinum hair and suit of armour). As an online platform, Second Life provides a parallel reality which simulates features of the real world: the fourteen-million registered users can purchase real estate, set up businesses, and engage in all manner of virtual interactions. In her 'documentary' I.Mirror (2007), Cao Fei provides an introduction to the beauty and excess of Second Life, as well as a depicting a romance between Tracy and an unknown avatar.

Cao Fei has continued to develop work in Second Life. She has built RMB City (2008) on the Second Life Creative Commons island of Kula. Candy-striped smoke stacks suggest continuous industrial production, missiles make unremitting pre-emptive strikes, and ships move goods swiftly in and out of port. A giant shopping cart, filled with skyscrapers and religious monuments, floats nearby. Named after Chinese money, RMB City is a perverse view of Beijing—a collusion of communism, socialism and capitalism—with Tiananmen Square as a swimming pool, a giant panda hanging from a crane, and a Mao statue half submerged under water like a ghost. Like Beijing itself, it is constantly under construction.

Cao Fei: Utopia is a joint project between the Institute of Modern Art, Brisbane and Artspace, Auckland; curated by Emma Bugden and Robert Leonard.

 

 

 

Location/venue: 

TheNewDowse
45 Laings Road, Lower Hutt
www.newdowse.org.nz

Date: 
26 Sep 2009 - 31 Jan 2010

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    The Dowse Art Museum

    The Dowse Art Museum presents a diverse exhibition programme of local, national and international contemporary artists and designers. Well established as one of New Zealand’s leading contemporary galleries, The Dowse celebrates creativity across a range of arts disciplines, including sculpture, jewellery, photography, architecture, craft and technology.

    A dynamic calendar of public programmes complements each exhibition season with curators' and artists' talks, school holiday programmes and workshops attracting visitors of all ages.

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