The curatorial process has always been based on the problems of the moment and the constant fluidity of the situation around us. In the past few years, the chaos and disorder that has pervaded both the distant world and our surroundings have overturned long-held optimistic expectations of social development and left us the situation as an unfinished crossword puzzle, leaving numerous fragmentary gaps between the black nodes that unfold the threads and questions of everyday life and cultural communities. They stretch, reorganize and intertwine, weaving a jagged web of that pounce on our turbulent lives. In The Rise of the Network Society (1996), Manuel Castells suggests that space is the manifestation of society, a manifestation that is not a reflection or a reproduction of society but a direct equivalent of society itself - space is society. According to Castells, “space is society” provides a more concrete field for us to observe society, allowing us to build experimental models and observe this exhibition as a “control group”.
Variables
The artists in this exhibition come from Europe, East Asia and South America, and the exhibition presents six sample artists' practices in painting, sculpture and mixed media over the last two years. These works were created around 2020, when the effects of pandemics, local wars and secondary disasters became a catalyst for disconnecting global flows and rethinking human values. It was reflected in the artists' work during this period, creating a control group for the production of the contemporary art content concerning real-life experiences; in contrast to the broader social context beyond the control group, the exhibition In comparison to the wider social context outside the control group, the linear time and the continuously fermenting social environment outside the exhibition space become obvious variables, and the experimental group, as opposed to the control group, is then established outside the exhibition space. In this set of contrasting relationships, time and social processes become constant constants and allow the two groups of samples produced within and outside the space to reveal other truths about reality in contrast to each other.
Prism/Viewshed
A standard white rectangular space provide as a symbolically clear boundary for this experimental process, abruptly spanning the wall structure at the space's diagonal, transforming into the elephant in the room, difficult to ignore but impossible to cross. The clear diagonal divisions correspond to the prism's structure and form, allowing the viewer to easily adjust their field of vision and perspective at any time in the space. As the viewer walks slowly through the cut-ups' large prisms, the movement of the body causes the viewing distance to be in a contradictory relationship with the wall, either cramped or open, and along with the shifting, grinding, and adjustment of the field of view. These works, which transcend geographical boundaries, refract, derive, and intertextualize in a continuous movement of viewing acts, engaging in an unbroken 'internal reflection' within the flow of the visual field. Under the underlying logic of 'space is society', the viewer looks at their spiritual nature and inner state in the light of the experience of reality gained outside the control group, allowing the content of the control group to transcend the artist's practice, that is to say, to 'disperse' in the visual sense - to reassign the right to process information to the viewer in a prism-like vision.