89 x 128, 85 x 43 cm, 85 x 43 cm
Composed of three photographic panels, Three Times at Yamato Hotel by Luka Yuanyuan Yang is a part of the artist’s ongoing project Dalian Mirage , a seven act play in a theatre staged as the city of Dalian. This modern city was built by the Russian Empire in 1898 and occupied by Japan between 1905 and 1945. Based on historical investigations, Yang created ten characters, including a Dalian-born Japanese writer and a Dalian-born American immigrant. The characters from different time periods visit the city for one day, passing through the urban spaces: a harbour, staircase, square, hotel, street and theatre. Overlapping time and space, the montage depicts how the world, at each instant, is defined by fragments and moments from the past. These three photographs of the Yamato Hotel restaurant in Dalian, respectively shot in the 1930s, 1980s and the present, are interwoven in the central panel of the work. Built by the Russians, occupied by the Japanese, and returned to the Chinese after 1945, the Yamato Hotel is also famous for having hosted the last Emperor of China, Pu Yi, in 1931. The left and right panels feature the interior design and decorative paintings of the hotel at three different time periods: Japanese occupation, the early stage of economic reform, and the present. As such, the work reveals the long-term colonial history of Dalian that is rarely mentioned in textbooks about Chinese history. Highlighting the changes that the restaurant went through over the years, the work unfolds the complexities of identity—demonstrating how it is not fixed, but is instead a fluid, non-linear continuum.
Luka Yuanyuan Yang is a photographer, filmmaker and visual artist based in Beijing. Spanning film, photography, artist books and performance (they are often intertwined in her projects), her work addresses questions related to identity, trauma, memory, ethnicity, migration, and mythology. Mixing documentary materials and fictional narratives, her visual storytelling challenges the rigid and conventional interpretation of history and gives voice to communities and individuals that have often been forgotten, silenced, or misinterpreted.
Louise Bourgeois | The Burton at Bideford Explore the work of Louise Bourgeois, one of the most celebrated and influential figures in modern and contemporary art in Devon With a career spanning eight decades from the 1930s until 2010, Louise Bourgeois is one of the great figures of modern and contemporary art...
The West Hollywood Artist Who Immortalised LA’s Golden Boys | AnOther A new exhibition in New York showcases the work of Kenneth Kendall, an artist who sculpted James Dean, Marlon Brando and more in the bohemian atmosphere of late 20th-century Los Angeles February 06, 2024 Text Miss Rosen Back in the 1950s, Hollywood’s fabled Melrose Avenue was still a sleepy street home to cabinetmakers and print shops catering to the local community...
Untitled is a work on paper by Martin Kippenberger comprised of several seemingly disparate elements: cut-out images of a group of dancers, a japanese ceramic vase, and a pair of legs, are all combined with gestural, hand-drawn traces and additional elements such as a candy wrapper from a hotel in Monte Carlo and a statistical form from a federal government office in Wiesbaden, Germany...
Sara Eliassen’s video work A Blank Slate (2014) employs cinematic effect to investigate the relationships between subjectivity, gaze, and memory...
Carlton Hotel project is the second part of a research on the Carlton, an iconic building of modernist architecture from the 1960s in Beirut...