HONG KONG.- Tai Kwun Contemporary announced a new group exhibition trust & confusion, running from 5 May to 5 December 2021. Curated by Xue Tan, Senior Curator at Tai Kwun, and renowned international curator Raimundas Malaauskas, trust & confusion is an evolving, accumulative exhibition that unfolds over several episodes on site and online.
trust & confusion is about the conversation of certainty and chance; the transformative power of bodies, intangibles, and ephemeral encounters; music and magic; and the luck of being alive, with all the concerns that come with it. This exhibition is an invitation to observe how things emerge in relation to each othersounds, gestures, smells, identitiesand to be a part of it, being surprised and giving attention to your inner landscape while a spectacle is taking place around you.
Transforming the white cube space into a fluctuating environment that hosts activities and sensations, the exhibition transforms this space in favour of movements, interactions, and deep listening for ears and bodies. There are several visible performances taking place as you arrive, and several invisible ones.
As you move along, there is a chance that you might be caught by the sounds of birds and humans conversing, two or three life retrospectives of previously unpublished photographic works, a short splash of dance, a posture reminiscent of a public sculpture in Hong Kong, melodies sung by a chorus of tone-deaf singers, a sound sculpture morphing into a theatre prop, a molecule striking a new olfactory possibility, an open rehearsal in public, foam mattresses transmitting the sound of ones favourite radio, a tree so obsessively protected that it is nowhere to be seen, a visual letter speaking of virtual existence and climate change, among others.
Observing nature's cycles and the importance of rituals, which anchor our beings and ancestries, the exhibition space is devised in the alignment of day and night, with a brief sunset room in between. Whereas artworks would grow and evolve in the day room, a solo or duo presentation would debut in the night room for each episode. Changes would take place after each full moon, when the tides are the deepest and the forest the nosiest. Some artists contributions will remain for months but in fresh configurations; others will appear in changing roles with the unfolding of time.
As a tribute to the bare human voice as a most vibrant and direct form of communication, a weekly release of voices by artists, writers, poets, and choreographers is made available on
www.trusting.hk, where you also find the calendar of the moon to guide you through the coming episodes.
Xue Tan, co-curator of trust & confusion, said, We first sketched out the contours of the exhibition in 2019 as we imagined creating a ground for our communitypolarised and exhausted by the incident of that yearto come together and rest. A constellation of live works of art exploring the individual and collective body through conversations, games, gatherings, and imagination was conceived.
Raimundas Malaauskas, co-curator of trust & confusion, noted, The exhibition may trigger a sense of being in a music video, or a backstage of a theatre set, inside a pinball machine, or in the midst of a meditation sessionall of it and more, while practising attentiveness, respect, and playfulness in the company of artworks and fellow visitors.
Tobias Berger, Head of Art at Tai Kwun, said, This 8-month-long project is conceived to present exciting forms of art that involve performance, memory, sounds, smells, and more. Such new forms also demand new formatschallenging the notion of the exhibition itself. trust & confusion encompasses evolving and accumulating parts: artworks that remain are reconfigured, while new episodes bring in new works. Visitors will find trust & confusion growing and changing throughout the year.