Shen Shaomin "I Touched the Voice of God"

Klein Sun Gallery

poster for Shen Shaomin "I Touched the Voice of God"

This event has ended.

The exhibition expresses Shen Shaomin's deep concerns for the future of our planet. I Sleep on Top of Myself and I Want to Know What Infinity Is are works that reveal the artist's outlook through hyperrealistic sculptures that illustrate the potential and metaphorical consequences of a world which is over-developed and despoiled. The work from which the exhibition derives its name, I Touched the Voice of God is made from broken sections of a rocket sent into space. Utilizing braille, the sculptures comment on the human inability to truly comprehend the universe.

I Sleep on Top of Myself is a series of hairless, motorized, lifelike sculptures of animals which portend a future where the earth is severely depleted of natural resources-so much so that animals begin to loose their fur. Trapped in deep sleep, these breathing creatures-a cat, a dog, a bunny, and two geese-are forced to sleep on the remnants of their fur and feathers in order to survive. As a metaphor, this quietly troubling piece asks if we humans will be forced to survive on the remnants of our past once we have exhausted all of our natural resources.

Through a similar methodology, I Want to Know What Infinity Is questions the urge to relentlessly develop and expand our economies at all costs. Similar to the way we strive for development, the old, naked, breathing hyperrealistic sculpture of a woman relentlessly strives for a perfect tan. In Shen Shaomin's eyes, the consequences of our constant need for development will change the face of our planet, just as the undying urge for beauty transformed this old woman's body.

The series titled, I Touched the Voice of God encapsulates both of the statements made in I Sleep on Top of Myself and I Want to Know What Infinity Is, but goes one step further to question human intelligence itself. Appropriated from a rocket sent into space, the material used in this series of work is embossed with English braille. Standing in front of these pieces, our vision blinds us from understanding what is written on each sculpture. One must, in fact, be blind in order to read the words within these mysterious objects. As symbols of our greater universe, the artist's choice to cover these rocket ship parts with a language most English speakers are illiterate in, reveals that the artist believes our typical, normal, and assumed modes of perception render us blind and unable to develop a true understanding of the universe.

Shen Shaomin was born in Heilongjiang Province, China in 1956. He lives and works in Sydney, Australia and Beijing, China.

Media

Schedule

from April 26, 2013 to June 02, 2013

Opening Reception on 2013-04-26 from 18:00 to 20:00

Artist(s)

Shen Shaomin

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