“That’s Entertainment!” Animal House Exhibition Review for Un Extended
On un Extended Sueann Chen covers ‘That’s Entertainment!’ an ‘in-house’ show at Animal House. This group exhibition amassed works from all of the gallery’s represented artists; Benjamin Barretto, Trent Crawford, Beth Maslen, Chris Madden, Victoria Stolz, Tim Woodward & Yusi Zang.
Discipline Paper 08: Graffiti and Cosplay: Regional Methods of Adapting to China’s Urbanisation in the 2000s
In this art historical paper, Sueann Chen compares artists Cao Fei and Zhang Dali’s approaches to the urbanisation of China — in Beijing and Guangzhou, respectively — in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Chen suggests that although Cao and Zhang’s works differ materially, they both address a sense of urban displacement, reimagining identity to establish a sense of place within their rapidly changing landscapes.
Salvaging Hybridity: Reimagining ‘Chineseness’ within the Global Art Arena
A Honours Thesis. Departing from fixed nationalist rhetoric and orientalist ethnography, I focus on ‘Chineseness’ as an embodied artistic subjectivity that strongly relates to China as a proposition rather than a fixed territory or political index. This research project proposes an alternative set of relations for approaching contemporary Chinese art by problematising the assumed ‘primordial’ fixity of Chineseness within the global context. This research attends to the impact of cultural globalisation and modern migration on the aesthetic modality and consciousness of contemporary Chinese artists who live or work in and out of China. I examine the works of Cao Fei, Chu YinHua, Lap-See Lam, Leung Mee Ping, and Shen Yuan.
“Inside/Out” : A Speculative Exhibition between White Rabbit Gallery and 4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Art
Global Mobilisation in the case of Contemporary Chinese Art in the 1980s-1990s
Contemporary Chinese artists of 1980’s and 1990’s were at the forefront of a new global artistic epoch. It was an era of confrontation, exchange, negotiation, and survival. As they entered their new norm of globalised Western hegemony, cross-cultural artists began to search for new expressions to decentralise and de-territorialise notions of identity and culture. Predicated on the ceaseless movement and exchange, Huang Yong Ping and Xu Bing brought about a new global modality that connects the hybrid expressions and aesthetics of their local identity to a transnational and global framework.
Exhibition Text : “Copper Spun Limbs”, Yvette James exhibited at SEVENTH Gallery 2022
Exhibition Text : “At Last ! The Sky!” - Rory Maley shown at Wethouse March 2022
Mass Memo Review - Honours, Victorian College of the Arts 2021
Revisiting “Magiciens de la Terre” with Rasheed Araeen through the lens of multicultural exhibition making
A critical re-examination of “Magiciens de la Terre” can offer us the necessary tools and alternatives to transcend homogenising cultural visions of the West. Rasheed Araeen’s evocation is a valuable reminder of the purpose in the confrontational process of reflection and re-examination, which allows for the capacity to re-contextualise and construct one’s interpretation and understanding of such a pivotal moment in exhibition making.
“Cities on the Move”(1997-1999) | How Hou Hanru exemplifies the moments of Contemporary Asian Art curating as it grapples with globalisation in the 1990’s
Cities on the Move ruptured the homogenising forces of the globalisation and hegemonic exhibition models of the white cube, embodied through its ever-evolving hybridisation and durational structures.
Exhibition Review of “THEN”- White Rabbit Gallery
The aim of my review was to unveil the Western ethnocentric lens that is often subjected to Chinese contemporary art and Asian Art, particularly in the context of Australia and the broader West. I hope this review will encourage you to reconsider the way you consume and understand Contemporary Asian Art, and acknowledge how it is often positioned by hegemonic cultural institutions as cultural and exotic tokens.
Chinese Apartment Artist’s and Maximalist’s political and cultural resistance against the International Art World in the 80’s-90’s
The homogenising forces of globalisation and Western mass culture undermined the heterogeneous nature of Chinese identity. Apartment Art and Maximalism were disembodied and ‘othered’ by the triumphalist cultural viewpoint of the West, shapeshifting the representation of Chinese Avant-garde in the international art market.
“Time Clock Piece” (One Year Performance 1980-81) -Tehching Hsieh
Piece on Tehching Hsieh’s “Time Clock Piece” (One Year Performance 1980-81)
“Challenging Mud” 1955 - Kazuo Shiraga
Piece on Kazuo Shiraga’s “Challenging Mud” 1955.