Grid Versus Chaos

Date
Jan 9, 2010 – Feb 5, 2010
Location
Gallery VER
Bangkok, Thailand

Amy Cheung, MAP Office (Gutierrez + Portefaix) , Wei Leng Tay

 

Gallery VER (Bangkok) and Para Site Art Space (Hong Kong) are honoured to present Grid Versus Chaos, a group exhibition including Amy Cheung, MAP Office (Gutierrez+Portefaix) and Wei Leng Tay in Bangkok.

The exhibition refers to the different possibilities of communication that the idea of grid offers, confronted to the notion of chaos in daily life in South Asia cities. The artists in the exhibition have produced new works that relate to different issues connected to the two “working concepts” that are the starting points of this project. Each artist or collective has offered different responses to this invitation for the production of a new work of art, either working with the local community, such as the project by Wei Leng Tay; researching on the imaginary of a grid-like island landscape as in MAP Office, of searching for an inner fictional space as in Amy Cheung.

Amy Cheung has contributed with a network fiber optic installation that reads into city dwelling stories in Western literature and places them metaphorically in the middle of the buzz of Bangkok. Oscar Wilde serves as a literary reference in the making process of this new work, which at the same time looks inside human nature.

MAP Office contribution is based on their ongoing research project on islands, this time, 100+1 islands in a grid pattern occupy the gallery floor, creating an installation that has its centerpiece in the island of Koh Tapu, a real place connected to fictional imagery and Southeast Asia.

Wei Leng Tay has created a photographic series for this project. Through her lens she has researched on the neighborhood of Hua Lamphong in Bangkok, creating a visual map of its inhabitants.

 

Acknowledgments:

This project – Grid Versus Chaos is supported by the Arts Development Fund of the Home Affairs Bureau, Government of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region.

Wei Leng Tay’s project is supported by the Singapore International Foundation.

 

Organizers: Gallery VER and Para Site Art Space

 

More materials are available to view on site at Para Site. 

Click here to see a full inventory of all archive materials and contact us at archive@para-site.art for enquiries, to request an appointment to view materials, and for archival materials donations.

 

The Archive Project is financially supported by the Project Grant of the Hong Kong Arts Development Council.

 

 

About the artists

Amy Cheung

Amy Cheung lives and works in Hong Kong. She gained her BA in History of Art & Fine Art from Goldsmith’s College and her MFA from the Slade School of Fine Art. Since graduation, she has initiated numerous city interventions and public art projects both locally and abroad. Cheung was Beck’s New Contemporaries in U.K. UNESCO-ASCHBERG Laureate, and represented Hong Kong in the 52th Venice Biennale, 2007. In the same year, she received the Outstanding Young Artist Award (Visual Arts) from the Hong Kong Arts Development Council.

 

Wei Leng Tay

Photographer Wei Leng Tay was born in Singapore and has been living and working in Hong Kong since 2002. Wei Leng began her professional career making portraits for magazines such as Time and Fortune. She is interested in exploring how people live. Her photographs have been exhibited in U.S., Japan, Europe, Hong Kong and Singapore, and are collected by the Kiyosato Museum of Photographic Arts in Japan.

 

MAP Office

MAP Office is a multidisciplinary platform based in Hong Kong, devised by Laurent Gutierrez (Casablanca, 1966) and Valérie Portefaix (Saint-Etienne, 1969). This duo of artists/architects works on real and imaginary territories through media as varied as drawing, photography, video, installation, performance and literary or theoretical texts. Offering a new take on public space, they relate an adventure mixing myths and reality; a confirmation that art can create reality. MAP Office has taken part in several international exhibitions, particularly the Venice, Gwangju, Istanbul, New Orleans and Sydney Biennials. They have published various books mixing humour, game and fiction.

 

PRESS RELEASE