Filtering by: Gao Yujie

Gao Yujie // Artist Talk & Discussion
May
5
6:30 PM18:30

Gao Yujie // Artist Talk & Discussion

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Gao Yujie during her daily performance in the Project Gallery, 2023.

The Alternator Centre for Contemporary Art is pleased to invite you to join Gao Yujie and guests on Friday, May 5th from 6:30 pm to 8 pm for an artist talk and discussion on the artist's recent exhibition Flowing to Unsettle in the Alternator's Project Gallery.

This in-person event will contain three parts. Gao will begin this event with a short presentation on her work including her recent 6-week-long performance at the Alternator. In part 2, Gao will be joined by Dr. Megan Smith and Xiaoxuan/Sherry Huang in discussing the performance and themes related to the exhibition such as perceptions of time. To close the event Gao and guests will open up the discussion to the audience for a Q&A.

This event is free with registration. Light snacks will be available for guests. Register at Eventbrite here.


Gao Yujie is an interdisciplinary media artist and a Ph.D. candidate at the University of British Columbia. Her generative participatory performance work studies the materiality of duration and explores the elasticity of space and time in rule-based interactive environments. Her exhibition, Flowing to Unsettle is on view in the Project Gallery of the Alternator until May 6th, 2023.

You can learn more about Gao and her exhibition here.


Xiaoxuan / Sherry Huang (she/they) is a writer, scholar, & educator working in experimental criticism, literary audio, & other forms of hybrid poetics. Her writing lingers in the doorway like a long goodbye, aiming to be what it claims to need: “A book [that] is always-already a sign of love. A sign for love.” Her first full-length publication, Love Speech (2019, Metatron Press,) is a book of poetry & auto-theory. She holds an MFA from University of British Columbia (Okanagan Campus,) & is a 1.5 generation Canadian-上海人.

You can learn more about Huang's work here.

Xiao Xuan / Sherry Huang 是一位以音乐、摄影和印刷为创作媒介的诗人。她通常喜欢用模拟的、短暂的、实验性的方法来制作有形的艺术品。她最近的长 篇出版物《爱的演讲》(梅塔特隆出版社2019年)是创新地结合了诗歌和书信体写作,同时她也正在发行的限量版包括磁带、侧边和杂志,并进一步尝试将诗歌与表演艺术的多元融合。


Dr. Megan Smith is a UBC 2022 Killam Laureate, Associate Professor in Creative Technologies in FCCS. Her practice-based research probes systems for delivering syndicated data through narrative structure and she often works with virtual and augmented reality, geo-location, live-feed installation, and performance as methods for storytelling.

You can learn more about Smith's work here.

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Gao Yujie // Flowing to Unsettle
Mar
24
to May 6

Gao Yujie // Flowing to Unsettle

  • Alternator Centre for Contemporary Art (map)
  • Google Calendar ICS

Gao Yujie during her daily performance at the Alternator, 2023.

Unsettling is home,
life is improvisation,
the present is not future enough to live with.

Flowing to Unsettle invites participants to explore the elasticity of experiential time through a durational performance that takes place over six weeks in the Project Gallery at the Alternator. 

As a Chinese media artist, performer, and researcher working in Canada, Gao Yujie uses time as a primary artistic material. Through performative actions such as drawing with different timeframes, her work delves into the essence of experiential temporality, both physically, digitally, and interculturally, examining how it can be stretched, compressed, and reconfigured in ways that challenge our taken-for-granted notion of time. Her research focuses on how performative computational art can inhabit and evoke different sensations of time, and how we can collectively hold space while experiencing individualized temporal perceptions. The central ideas are the concept of flow and a sense of wandering in relation to time and how these ‘states of being’ affect our perceptions.

Flowing to Unsettle is the final phase of a PhD research-creation project at UBC Okanagan initiated in 2020. In the previous phases Yujie has performed in a total of 72 livestreams, repeatedly implementing the same improvisation prompt ‘fill a canvas from empty to full’ with variables like duration, materials, platforms, and scales. For the first time ever, through her six-week-long performance at the Alternator, Yujie will use the exhibition space as her canvas, performing every day, collaborating with a variety of technologies and inviting participants to engage with their own temporal perceptions in an embodied experience where they are encouraged to slow down, reflect, and connect with the environment. The process of being – including thinking, wandering, playing, making, failing, problem-solving, and reflecting – forms the ‘whole’ of the work. The work itself is in the process. The performance will be broadcasted and recorded. By performing extensively for six weeks, she is also questioning what defines the boundaries between art time, machine time and life time and how they intertwine with each other.

The subthemes explored in Flowing to Unsettle include accumulation and decay, boredom and freedom, repetition and variation, rules and autonomy, endurance and intuition and how each aspect shapes our time perspective. By creating an open-ended live setting, Yujie invites multiple perceptions of time to coexist and foster meaningful shared experiences that celebrate uniqueness and differences. In doing so, she hopes to open up new possibilities for artistic expression of understanding and relating to time and to deliver this message for the audience:

“Take your time.”


Flowing to Unsettle will be on view in the Project Gallery from March 24 - May 6, 2023. You can view the live stream of Gao’s six-week-long durational performance below and view each previous day’s live stream here.

Livestream of Gao Yujie’s performance of Flowing to Unsettle.


Gao Yujie is an interdisciplinary media artist and a Ph.D. candidate at the University of British Columbia. Her generative participatory performance work studies the materiality of duration and explores the elasticity of space and time in rule-based interactive environments.

Learn more about Gao’s work on her website.

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