Evening Shadow: Ye Cheng, Cathleen Clarke, Jeane Cohen, MC Escher, Dan Herschlein, Ho Jae Kim, Yayoi Kusama, Scott Laufer, Yeni Mao, Catalina Ouyang, Justin Ortiz, Jacopo Pagin, Astra Huimeng Wang, Guimi You

展览现场
新闻稿
Ye Cheng
Cathleen Clarke
Jeane Cohen
MC Escher
Dan Herschlein
Ho Jae Kim
Yayoi Kusama
Scott Laufer
Yeni Mao
Catalina Ouyang
Justin Ortiz
Jacopo Pagin
Astra Huimeng Wang
Guimi You
 

 

If the course of the day were to be divided into intervals based on the psychic energy with which they are charged, the transition between night and day would emerge as the most concentrated period filled with feelings of ambivalence and haze. The quality of light that defines this lingering first hour after the sun descends corresponds to a specific sensation but a vagueness of thought. A sense of anxiety attaches itself to the desires one might pursue, if only their satisfaction could be guaranteed in advance. The day having just passed and night not yet formed, everything takes on an unresolved character. Time is compressed. The barrier between consciousness and the unconscious begins to dissolve. A slight paranoia colors the scene, reflecting the possibilities lost within each moment that passes, more apparent now that their passing coincides with the looming arrival of nightfall. The in-betweenness of dusk suggests the past and all of the future. History is suspended in the dimly lit sky.


Make Room is pleased to announce Evening Shadow, an exhibition that delves into those things that appear on the edge of awareness, where, not fully formed, they reveal something chimerical about the process of thought and its relationship to the outer world: at a certain point, the mind, too, becomes an object that we confront. This group of work by Cathleen Clarke, Ye Cheng, Jeane Cohen, M.C. Escher, Dan Herschlein, Ho Jae Kim, Yayoi Kusama, Scott Laufer, Yeni Mao, Justin Ortiz, Catalina Ouyang, Jacopo Pagin, Astra Huimeng Wang, and Guimi You explores dusk as a metaphor for both history and consciousness while also testing the power of its medium to transform the substance of objects and feelings.