SAN FRANCISCO, CA.- Kongkee, an award-winning animation director and visual artist, takes you back to the future in an odyssey more than 2,000 years in the making. Part comic book, part motion picture, part meditation on history repeating, the immersive experience of Kongkee: Warring States Cyberpunk traces the legendary Chinese poet Qu Yuans soul on a journey from the ancient Chu Kingdom to an imagined 21st century Asia of cyborgs, electric rock, and surprising romantic reunions.
Making its North American debut only at the
Asian Art Museum, Kongkee: Warring States Cyberpunk invites visitors to step into a glowing series of animated vignettessome projected across walls and ceilings, some featured on screens for more intimate viewing, some accented with interactive elements. The exhibition also features galleries of Kongkees art sketched in response to displays of age-old Chinese artworks from the museums collection. These inspirational artifacts, which are presented in the exhibition, include bronzes and jades from the eponymous Warring States Period (c. 481 221 BCE) and earlier, a time when China emerged from myth into history with the founding of the first empire by the Qin.
Curated by the museums head of contemporary art, Abby Chen, Warring States Cyberpunk will occupy the museums Akiko Yamazaki and Jerry Yang Pavilion which opened in 2021 with a blockbuster exhibition by digital collective teamLab.
Kongkee starts his contemporary art process by researching and allegorizing the historical figures of the Warring States period, and this time, by cross-referencing the Asian Art Museums own archaeological Chinese collection, explains Chen. He brilliantly draws these ancient artworks into his own dazzling vision, showing how the past haunts the present, but also offering us moments of connection and reconnection that make space for imagining what a vibrant strain of Asian Futurism can look and feel like, one full of energy, music, and color that creatively entwine the enigma of the past with caution toward cutting-edge technologies yet to be discovered.
The exhibition centers on the migratory soul of the poet Qu Yuan ([Choo Yoo-wahn] c. 339 278 BCE) who drowned himself in a river, and whose legacy carries on in the famous Dragon Boat races and the associated festival that are lively features of Chinese communities the world over. Like the Greek philosopher Heraclitus said, No man ever steps in the same river twice, for its not the same river and hes not the same man. says Kongkee. I asked myself, what happens when a soul emerges after 2,000 years under waterdoes it seek out something new? Does it return to places that are familiar? Qu Yuans poetry has a psychedelic, wandering quality to the language that I tried to reflect in my art, but I also wanted him to reflect the disorientation as well as the hope of our era.
The result is a sci-fi neon dream that follows a resurrected android version of Qu Yuan, struggling with his memories of the river where he took his own life and pondering the duality of death and immortality, the body and the soul, and what it is to be humanor a machine that is capable of experiencing more than a human ever could.
The recurring use of floating waves, ambient percussion, and the museums own ancient art within the exhibition immerses audiences in the robot Qu Yuans quest for answers and the recovery of his soul. Visitors will follow along as he rises to rock stardom with the help of other androids in a contemporary cyborg fantasy that ends with his reconciliation with the reincarnated King Huai of Chu. In the background lurks the dark specter of the first emperor, Qin Shi Huang, a name forever linked to false promises of immortality, whose conquest of Qu Yuans homeland led to the poets suicide.
The Warring States period was a time of political strife, but also a moment of profound artistic exuberance when many of the most enduring and potent motifs became embedded across Chinese culture: snake-like dragons, all-over geometric patterns, spirit guides to aide your pursuit of longevityeven immortality, says Jay Xu, the Barbara Bass Bakar Director and CEO of the Asian Art Museum, and a globally-recognized specialist in early China. Kongkee: Warring States Cyberpunk offers us all a way to connect the past to the present and to value how the digital crafts and digital storytelling of todayanimation, video art, even video gamesshare the same kinds of hard-won technique, inspiration, and cultural influence as the bronzes, jades, and lacquerwares of old once did.
Kongkee, a.k.a. KONG Khong-chang, (b. 1977, Chinese, born Malaysia, raised in Hong Kong) is an animation director and visual artist currently based in London. He was the Founder of studio Penguin Lab since 2008. His work has been featured in film festivals, and captured the eye of Britpop band Blur, who partnered with Kongkee to create a comic book, Travel to Hong Kong with Blur, based on their hit album The Magic Whip (2015). In 2012 his comics Detournements: La littérature de Hong Kong en bande dessinée (co. Chihoi) was published in French in Europe. Kongkee started developing the comic series Mi Luo Virtual in 2013, which became the basis for Kongkee: Warring States Cyberpunk. In 2020 a chapter of this comic was animated and transformed into a short film Dragons Delusion that won the grand prize of DigiCon6, the top honor for the category in Asia. His most recent work Flower In The Mirror, an interactive video installation commissioned by M+ Museum, is currently on view in Hong Kong.