25.06.18 — 23.07.18

Tao Hui: Two Videos Compilation

Presenting:

The Dusk of Tehran, 2014, Colours And Sound Single Channel Video,4’14”
Talk about Body, 2013, Colours And Sound Single Channel Video, 3’45”

About the artworks

The Dusk of Tehran

In Iran, many rights of women are suppressed under the name of protecting. Women are always in passive position in the frame of marriage law. Entertainment is forbidden for women, and female singers are not allowed to give open performance. Hong Kong is a traditional place advocating for freedom, and women in Hong Kong may freely pursue their own love, dream and lifestyle. I chose an Iranian girl, who worked for a theater, to recreate a dialogue in a private car of the deceased Hong Kong female icon Anita Mui (aka. Mei Yanfang, CN: 梅艳芳) and her fans in a concert. The dialogue shows the free pursuit of Anita Mui on love and marriage. I am attempting to seek for the differences and commonalities presented by people from different nations and areas in the same story frame, and also hope to show the attitude of Iranian women toward life and emotion through such a kind of performance and review the free space for people under the governance of totalitarianism.

Talk about Body

The artist addressed in her own room as a Muslim girl. She used the article written by a physical anthropologist, which is analyzing his own body as the chief source. He analyzes the body structure, physiognomy characteristic and blood lineage gene objectively in detail and fabricates a ceremony scene according to the authentic materials. He attempts to abandon emotion and focus on his own body, resist the over-spiritual confinement by traditional religion and try to make a balance between them.

About the artist

Tao Hui’s works focus on culture and identity through using various mediums including video, objects, and installation. His signature approach is to create bizarre and exaggerated scenes and metaphors to question the tenets of urbanization and hegemonic thinking. His works are visceral and provocative, yet enlightening and always imbued with a strong emotional power and a sense of “displacement”, inviting the viewers to confront themselves with their own cultural history, ways of living and social identities.