Salvation Mountain

2018 - Film & Video (Film & Video)

22:40 minutes

Liu Yu


Salvation Mountain by Liu Yu takes California’s history of the Gold Rush as its starting point. The single-channel video combines drone footage and animations to depict desolate ghost towns and abandoned mining pits of California, leading the viewer through an out of body experience through the vast American landscape. The viewer is taken on a journey, led by the three protagonists – a pioneer, a vagabond, and the avatar of a drone–to Salvation Mountain, a man-made mountain constructed out of latex paint with Christian sayings and Bible verses, and Slab City, a migratory commune in Southern California’s desert. Both communities remain decommissioned and uncontrolled, and there is no electricity, running water, or law enforcement. Delineations of time and history seem to disintegrate as each of the protagonists candidly give insight into their personal history and agendas as they sit around a campfire, revealing California’s past, present, and even future. Liu Yu employs gold as a symbol to explore ideas such as social status, exploration, and settler colonies, prompting us to consider how humans came to shape their world and ideologies around the mining of minerals. Salvation Mountain surfaces the contradictions of a capitalist society, and in particular the phenomenon of the Silicon Gold Rush which has impacted the Bay Area for the last several decades. Liu intersects footage of ungovernable sites in California with tales and aspirations of currency creation and the human faith in objects, posing the question: In the age of late capitalism, how does one achieve absolute freedom? Salvation Mountain explores the contradictions of capitalist society and in particular the Bay Area, as history repeats itself with the Silicon Gold Rush becoming at once a global site of innovation and high technology and simultaneously one of severe poverty, inequality, and with some of the poorest public infrastructures in the country.


Liu Yu has developed a multifaceted artistic practice that takes field documentation as its point of departure. Liu’s work employs human perspectives, spatial disruptions, and the fluidity of an object’s identity within systems to portray the trajectory of human evolution. Liu’s practice references a variety of visual languages through a series of approaches that include texts, publications, documentary images that imitate films, and the collection of vast amounts of onsite field research and reference materials. Through these methods and materials, Liu explores the possibilities of rearranging diverse modes of communication, integrating the fragments of spaces, histories, images, and narratives by connecting subjects and reframing them with new information.


Colors:



Other related works, blended automatically  
» see more

The Ship of Fools Mooring at the Train Station
© » KADIST

Liu Yu

2016

“Ship of Fools” is a literary term derived from Sebastian Brant’s 1949 satirical allegory of the same name...

Related works sharing similar palette  
» see more

Manufactured Landscape
© » KADIST

Shi Guowei

Through a hand-painting process, Shi Guowei created Manufactured Landscape ...

Related 3a
© » KADIST

Anthony Goicolea

2008

Goicolea has made drawings based on a family album of relations that he did not know but who in one way or another contributed to his history and to the predicament in which he now finds himself as a Cuban in America...

The Ugly One
© » KADIST

Eric Baudelaire

2013

With the war-torn Beirut cityscape as its backdrop—urban alleys, glistening beaches, abandoned buildings—Eric Baudelaire’s complex film, The Ugly One , unfolds in a time and place that vacillates among revolutionary narratives of the past, the fragile and ever-changing political situation of the present, and attempts to piece together the memories of those that live, or once lived, in the city...

The Working Processes of Artists: Tina Fung
© » ARTS EQUATOR

The Working Processes of Artists: Tina Fung | ArtsEquator Skip to content Tina Fung is a set designer and installation artist who runs Space Objekt, a design studio based in Singapore...

Other works by: » Liu Yu  
» see more

The Ship of Fools Mooring at the Train Station
© » KADIST

Liu Yu

2016

“Ship of Fools” is a literary term derived from Sebastian Brant’s 1949 satirical allegory of the same name...

Related works found in the same semantic group  
» see more

Russian billionaire loses fraud case against Sotheby’s.
© » ARTSY

Russian billionaire loses fraud case against Sotheby’s...

Winter North Summer South No. 5
© » KADIST

Zhou Tao

2018

Zhou Tao spent almost two years in 2017 and 2018 in an eco-industrial park at the foot of the Kunlun Mountains in China exploring the activities of humans and other species in that particular topography between the mountain, the land and the desert...

Winter North Summer South No. 2
© » KADIST

Zhou Tao

2019

Zhou Tao spent almost two years in 2017 and 2018 in an eco-industrial park at the foot of the Kunlun Mountains in China exploring the activities of humans and other species in that particular topography between the mountain, the land and the desert...

Opening: Sickboy – ‘Optical Delusions’ @ Harvey Nichols (Bristol)
© » ARRESTED MOTION

Opening: Sickboy – ‘Optical Delusions’ @ Harvey Nichols (Bristol) « Arrested Motion Mixing art and fine dining, Sickboy ( interviewed ) is kicking off his latest show at the high-end department store Harvey Nichols tonight with a launch dinner and artist’s talk...