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YSABELLE CHEUNG

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YSABELLE CHEUNG

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In Print

ArtAsiaPacific: Kwok Mang-Ho (Frog King)

April 27, 2018 Ysabelle Cheung
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Published March/Apr 2018 issue of ArtAsiaPacific. To read full article, visit the magazine's Digital Library. (Click on the image to scroll through the pages.) 

"In fire, Kwok recognized an ineffable quality that embodies ephemerality—it blazes and then quickly dies, and yet ravages everything it grazes. The idea to burn quotidian objects had come to him one day in the ’70s, when he stumbled across a mass of charred, lumpen pipes and toys that had fallen victim to a recent warehouse fire. After unsuccessful inquiries into purchasing these ashen artifacts, which for the owners only signaled loss and damage, Kwok loaded his truck and headed to the open fields of Yuen Long, an area in the New Territories that would become the site of some of his most experimental work. There, he began burning objects and stacking them together to form totems that utilized the original structure of these items—often made of bamboo, or another element he had begun to experiment with at the time in large quantities: wood. In forcing uniformity in their color by burning them to a black char, Kwok rendered the objects unrecognizable. An example is Burnt 1074 (1975), which in its subtle variations of ash and charcoal hints at the shapes of found cow bones, metal pipes, logs and toys, the functions of which have been reduced to pure sculpture."

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ArtAsiaPacific: Review of "Ajeongkoo"

April 27, 2018 Ysabelle Cheung
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Published Nov/Dec 2017 issue of ArtAsiaPacific. To read full article, visit the magazine's Digital Library. (Click on the image to scroll through pages.) 

"In Koo Jeong A’s weird, protean universe, an alien baby presenting a V-sign offers a clue to the utter zaniness of “ousss,” a term developed by the artist in the late 1990s that has never been fully explained. It is, she has ventured, a noun and a verb, an object and a subject. At Art Sonje Center, where Koo recently held a solo show—perhaps better described as a puzzle—across two levels, it was apparent that such clues, of which Koo’s work abounds, are more cryptic than one initially assumes. Step back from the page and consider it again: what do you think the V-sign means in the hands of a fictional baby alien floating across a dark screen?”

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ArtAsiaPacific: Sputniko!

April 27, 2018 Ysabelle Cheung
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Published Sept/Oct 2017 issue of ArtAsiaPacific. To read full article, visit the magazine's Digital Library. (Click on the image to scroll through pages.) 

"Her exploration in peer-to-peer sharing and the dissemination of ideas through popular media, as with her music videos, manga-esque costumes and narratives, makes her an idiosyncratic alloy of geek, artist and pop star. Using this identity, Ozaki invents futures for other people as well as herself; this penchant for experimentation extends to even her artist moniker. Sputniko! is a mutation of her high school sobriquet “Sputnik,” also the name for the series of artificial satellites that the Soviet Union launched into space in the late 1950s, and translates as “fellow wanderer” from Russian. In many ways, Ozaki’s indefatigable search for new modes of living and alternate realities mirrors society’s desire to connect, share and distribute."

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ArtAsiaPacific: Abdul-Rahman Abdullah

April 27, 2018 Ysabelle Cheung
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Published July/August 2017 issue of ArtAsiaPacific. To read full article, visit the magazine's Digital Library. (Click on the image to scroll through pages.) 

"In one corner of the show was a hyperrealistic silicone effigy of the hanging sacrificial halal lamb—In the Name (2015)—that the siblings’ father had to slaughter in their backyard; in the same room was Wednesday’s Child (2013), featuring a resin-cast, taqiyah-wearing child sitting cross-legged on an ornate prayer mat, looking up at a neoclassical chandelier. Close to the skirting of the room laid some of Abdullah’s earliest works, created during his studies at VCA, including a socket outlet fitted with the protruding blades of an Australian Type I plug: a tongue-in-cheek, almost magical-realist-style protest of the mundane.

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ArtAsiaPacific: Where I Work with Firenze Lai

April 27, 2018 Ysabelle Cheung
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Published July/August 2017 issue of ArtAsiaPacific. To read full article, visit the magazine's Digital Library. (Click on the image to scroll through pages.) 

"An appointment with Firenze Lai at her studio in the New Territories of Hong Kong began with “petite musique de chambre.” Translated as a “little chamber music,” the term was used by postminimalist composer Wim Mertens to define his 1983 EP Struggle for Pleasure, the lugubrious piano lines of which ran softly from Lai’s MacBook the day we met."

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