This past summer I had a large solo exhibition, Gu Xiong: Migrations at the Galaxy Museum of Contemporary Art in Chongqing, China. After a month’s preparation (with the help of over a hundred volunteers and the gallery staff), however, the exhibition was shut down before it could open. It was taken down over the following two days, during which time the gallery’s doors remained open, allowing visitors to watch the work slowly disappear.
Exhibition Overview
Exhibition poster.
Yellow Cargo, a cargo ship constructed out of boxes from businesses in Chongqing, Gu’s hometown.
“It’s been 19 years since I have travelled back and forth between the two cities. … As Chongqing strives to rise as an international metropolis, I strive to build up a new cultural identity overseas. The struggles we went through pull me even closer to the city.” — Gu
Projected on the stern of the ship is a video of the confluence of the Yangtze and Jialing rivers. The Yangtze eventually joins the Pacific, carrying the made-in-Chongqing merchandise to the world.
Illuminated Niagara Falls: this installation consists of 4000 photos of foreign migrant workers, five souvenir bottles of “illuminated” water from Niagara Falls, and four fruit baskets from Ontario farms.
Niagara Falls is a Canadian icon, yet few realize that tens of thousands of foreign farm workers labour in the region behind the Niagara Falls. Their presence goes back to the 1960s, but their contributions to the country are often overlooked. The hardworking migrant workers remain unknown and anonymous; yet it is them who bring color and illumination to our Niagara Falls, not the spotlights that are thrown on at night, nor the colored water in the souvenir shops.
The tomato first came to Gu’s attention in the hands of a Mexican migrant worker. The worker was staring intently at the tomato, turning it this way and that. Then he crushed it in his hand.
The agricultural labour is provided by migrant workers from across the world, but the tomato packaging just says “product of Canada.” For the worker, to crush these tomatoes is to transform that lonely existence into something acknowledged by the body of the tomato—the silence contained in the perfect forms let out in an explosion of pent-up anger, frustration and melancholy.
The crushing of the tomatoes symbolizes freedom from the
silence, isolation and barely endured existence to
something solemn and stirringly beautiful. Their remains
assert their presence—the smell, the wetness, and the
splattering.
There was a bone house at Harling Point in Victoria,
Canada in 1903, where the remains of deceased Chinese
immigrants were cleaned and prepared for burial. After
being buried for seven years, the remains of early
Chinese immigrants were re-excavated, cleaned and dried,
wrapped in a white cloth and shipped back to their
hometown in China for burial.
This tradition was practiced by Chinese immigrants in
Canada until 1937, when Sino-Japanese war sparked in
China. Following the closure of this bone house, around
900 stored remains were buried at a cemetery, which
replaced the bone house. Their tombstones face towards
the Pacific, their homeland on the other end of the
ocean.
A Bone House. Reverence for ancestors buried to
rest.
Intertwined Rivers This karaoke-style video brings together images of three
rivers: the Rhine, the Red River, and the Yangtze. While
these rivers do not meet on a map, they are joined by an
individual’s global journey. The merging of these distant
rivers represents our cultural hybridity.
I Am Who I Am tells the history of Chinese
Canadian immigrants, their hard work, and their effort to
build a social identity in a different cultural
background. From the time of gold rush to the
construction of railways, Chinese immigrants have spread
out across Canada. The photos expose the hardship Chinese
immigrants endured, their persistence and beliefs. This
installation taps into the connection between humanity
and cultural backgrounds in the age of globalization and
world migration.
Chinese Canadians have made many contributions to the
country. They built the railways. They fought in the
Second World War. Their contributions boost economic
development in Canada and uphold Canadian values. In
return, it also propelled the Canadian government to
repeal the Chinese Immigration Act and to grant Chinese
immigrants suffrage. Today, every Chinese immigrant or
immigrant descendent, while adapting to a new social
environment, is also reflecting upon the culture and self
in between the clashes of two cultures. In the process,
new cultural identity and space are created.
Gu’s poem “Pins” Gu participated in the <i exhibition at
the China National Museum of Fine Arts in Beijing. In
February 1989, it was the first Chinese Avant-Garde
exhibition. Around 250 Chinese contemporary artists
participated in this show. This video shows the
exhibition and Gu’s installation/performance,
Enclosures.
“Facing the Great wall, the Paris Bastille Wall and the
Berlin Wall: we understand the isolation between humanity
and nature, individual and an ethnic group, individual
and the self: The price people pay for trying to
breakdown the isolation.“ — from Gu’s 1989 poem
EnclosuresCafeteriaCrushed Cans
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Selected Artworks
Red River
This karaoke-style video brings together images of three
rivers: the Rhine, the Red River, and the Yangtze. While these
rivers do not meet on a map, they are joined by an individual’s
global journey.
Campfire
This video deals with the hardship of being placed in a
completely different culture. This experience draws attention to
the concepts of “home” and “belonging.” At the time for Gu and
his family, home had just changed from China to Canada. Gu and
his family had their first experience of camping in Canada after
5 years of moving. This experience was one his first leisure
moments in Canada. He set up a campfire, and while he was finally
experiencing a relaxing moment by feeling the warmth of the fire
and listening to the cracking log fire sound, his mind was at
work going through common thoughts and words he dealt with after
moving to Canada. This video illustrates some of the thoughts
going through Gu’s mind.
Pins
“Pins represent all sorts of embarrassment, reluctance, and unfairness, immigrants could experience living in Canada. These things make my heart ache. They prick on my heart like pins, yet not to the extent that my heart bleeds; as time passes, they appear even less important. However, these pains keep reminding me that I could not draw back out of fear; on the contrary, I have to advance against hardship.” — Gu Xiong
Tearing Down the Exhibition
Posters advertising the exhibition
Posters removed
Erasing Thoughts: Gu’s essay Rethinking
Cultural Transformation is slowly peeled from the
wall.
Packing up paper boats
Tearing off Memories: a gallery worker
removes Ni Kun’s essay Migrations—I Am Who
I Am from the entrance to the gallery.
Hiding the Enclosures: the panels for the
paintings that make up Enclosures are
taken down from the walls and stacked before they are
removed from the room.
Dimming Niagara Falls: the 4000 photographs
of Illuminated Niagra are packed up into
bags.
Disposing Tomatoes: Gu’s tomatoes represent
the all of the hard work, and all of the workers, which
is hidden from the people who purchase the tomatoes.
Peeling the RedVanishing Smile