From January 20 to March 31, 2024, Richmond Art Gallery (RAG) presents acclaimed Chinese artist Shen Xin’s first major solo show in Canada titled but this is the language we met in; ??????????, and a group exhibition Let the real world in, featuring works from an international line up of artists; Kirsten Leenaars, Yaimel López, Zaldívar, Yoshua Okón, and Wapikoni Mobile.
“The two exhibitions are interconnected in their interest in communication and the use of the voice in different ways,” says curator Zoë Chan. “Shen Xin is interested in language and translation, as it is practiced across cultures, articulated between humans and nature, and expressed by citizens to their governments. The artists in Let the real world in present videos in which youth have the agency to express themselves and their perspectives on the world around them. We are living in a time of war, environmental crisis, and socioeconomic inequality. These exhibitions invite audiences to reflect on their own relationship to these realities, whether they are happening in their own backyards or further afield.”
but this is the language we met in; ?????????? take a deep look at communication in all its myriad forms — gestural, oral, written, digital — across culture, time, and space, linking humans, animals, and nature. At the centre of Xin’s exhibition is a poetic new video, the first in a larger series titled Grounds for Coherence. Its eclectic imagery connects the artist’s intense yearning to uncover and understand language in its most primal forms, including contemporary languages of prose and protest.
Shen Xin was born in Chengdu, China, in 1990. They graduated from La Salle College of the Arts in Singapore and earned their MFA from the Slade School of Fine Art in London. Their work has been shown at major art institutions around the world, including the Walker Art Center and SeMA Seoul Museum of Art, and have been featured in Art Review, ArtDaily, and Art Asia Pacific.
Let the real world in presents a selection of contemporary videos that centers on children and youth who boldly articulate director Jean-Luc Godard’s credo that “film should bear witness to the period.” Rather than speak on behalf of children or try to protect them from difficult realities, the videos here vividly foreground young people’s agency, taking seriously their perspectives, ideas, and experiences of the world.
Kirsten Leenaars’s three-channel video (Re)Housing the American Dream: A Message from the Future (2017) is part of an ongoing, community-based, participatory documentary project featuring refugee and American-born youth from the Milwaukee Academy of Chinese Language International Newcomer Center and Highland Community School.
Yoshua Okón’s Los Palacios de Moctezuma/The Halls of Moctezuma (2015) features nine undocumented immigrant children from Guatemala who sing a modified version of the US Marines’ Hymn. The children’s version narrates the US invasion of their home country, placing special emphasis on the government’s complicity with transnational corporations.
Montreal-based nonprofit organization Wapikoni Mobile will present three video works: Hunting Lessons (2023), It’s Me Landon (2018), and Katatjatuuk Kangirsumi (Throat Singing in Kangirsuk) (2018). Giving voice to Indigenous youth by co-creating short films and musical recordings with children Wapikoni Mobile’s programming aims to raise awareness and educate the wider public about Indigenous cultures, issues, and rights.
Cuban artist Yaimel López Zaldívar, completes the exhibition with 16 RAG-commissioned screenprints created in the dynamic artisanal tradition of Cuban political and cultural poster-making of the 1960s, 70s, and 80s.
Richmond Art Gallery is located in the Richmond Cultural Centre at 7700 Minoru Gate, open 10am-6pm weekdays and Noon-5pm weekends with admission by donation