Cao Fei: Blueprints at Serpentine Gallery, London

Cao Fei: Blueprints at Serpentine Gallery, London. Images courtesy of the artist and Serpentine Gallery.
Cao Fei: Blueprints at Serpentine Gallery, London. Images courtesy of the artist and Serpentine Gallery.
Cao Fei: Blueprints at Serpentine Gallery, London. Images courtesy of the artist and Serpentine Gallery.
Cao Fei: Blueprints at Serpentine Gallery, London. Images courtesy of the artist and Serpentine Gallery.
Cao Fei: Blueprints at Serpentine Gallery, London. Images courtesy of the artist and Serpentine Gallery.

PR: Cao Fei’s work is underpinned by an ongoing exploration of virtuality, how it has radically altered our perception of self and changed the way we understand reality. This slippage between the physical and the virtual is always present in her work; from the utopic and dystopic potentials of our modern-day cities, the escapism of users via the virtual platform, Second Life, to the alienating effects of mechanized labor in China, Cao Fei often addresses these far-reaching topics through deadpan humor and the creation of surreal encounters. Although each of Cao Fei’s worlds appear to teeter on the edge of apocalyptic uncertainty, her characters navigate these complex and chaotic realities with vigor and agency, harnessing the unique possibilities of technology in order to shape a collective future.

This project at the Serpentine Galleries is Cao Fei’s first large-scale institutional solo exhibition in the UK, and is the third time that she has participated in the Galleries’ artistic program: firstly, as part of ‘China Power Station: Part 1’, an offsite Serpentine exhibition at Battersea Power Station in 2006, where the artist presented her film, Whose Utopia?, and then in 2008, with the installation of RMB City in the Gallery’s entrance space, where visitors could access a fictional city constructed in the online virtual world of Second Life. Outside the UK, the Serpentine has worked with some of the region’s most exciting practitioners with presentations in China and Hong Kong; group exhibition Hack Space (2016), featuring work by Cao Fei, and the Beijing Pavilion (2018), designed by JIAKUN Architects.

“For me virtuality is a means to express myself, to understand reality, which is what I’m interested in. I use writing and film too, but we are living in an age of rapid technology and in this context, we need to know that virtuality has changed the way reality works. And to do this we need to be part of it.” Cao Fei

This slippage between the physical and the virtual is always present in her work; from the utopic and dystopic potentials of our modern-day cities, the escapism of users via the virtual platform, Second Life, to the alienating effects of mechanized labor in China, Cao Fei often addresses these topics through the creation of surreal encounters and with a subtle sense of play. Although each of Cao Fei’s worlds appears to teeter on the edge of apocalyptic uncertainty, her characters navigate these complex and chaotic realities with vigor and agency, harnessing the unique possibilities of technology in order to shape a collective future. The Serpentine Galleries exhibition brings together new and existing works by Cao Fei in an immersive, site-specific installation, expanding the themes of automation, virtuality and technology that she continuously draws upon.

At the center of this exhibition is a new Virtual Reality artwork The Eternal Wave, produced in collaboration with Acute Art and premiered as part of Blueprints; a site-specific installation bringing together collected archival material and furniture that is based on elements of Cao Fei’s Beijing studio; and her latest film, Nova. These three interconnected works mark the culmination of Cao Fei’s extensive research in Beijing over the last five years, examining the social history and urban transformation of the city’s Jiuxianqiao (‘Hong Xia’) district where she lives and works. This new body of work will be presented within an installation that brings together a selection of the artist’s previous film works to expand the themes of automation, virtuosity, and technology, giving visitors an introduction to her wider practice.

The earliest work in the exhibition, Whose Utopia? (2006), is paired with her recent film, Asia One (2018) in an installation that considers the significance of automation on the human body and its laboring self, whilst the 2014 work, La Town, presents a post-apocalyptic cityscape pictured through cinematic stop-motion animation. Connecting back to the Serpentine’s 2008 project with Cao Fei, her work RMB City: A Second Life City Planning will be re-presented in the Serpentine Gallery lobby. Together, these works further the layering of virtual, physical and cinematic spaces that are encountered in the first part of the exhibition, leading visitors through alternative realities and multiple frames of experience.

Exhibition curated by

Hans Ulrich Obrist, Artistic Director, and Joseph Constable, Associate Curator

With thanks to Rebecca Lewin, Curator, Exhibitions and Design; Mike Gaughan, Gallery Manager; Joel Bunn, Installation and Production Manager, and Caterina Avataneo, Curatorial Assistant.

Production team: ADi Audiovisual (Ant Marlow, Sara Smith, Josh Love) and Beyond Surface, Anthony Williams

Unless otherwise stated all works are courtesy the artist, Vitamin Creative Space and Sprüth Magers.

Cao Fei, Blueprints (Installation view, Serpentine Gallery, 4 March – 17 May 2020) Photo credit: Gautier Deblonde

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The press release and the photographs are courtesy of the gallery and the artists.

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