Artist : Chu ChunTeng
Curator : Wang Rui-Xu
“With death, Dasein stands before itself in its ownmost potentiality-for-Being.”
--Martin Heidegger, Being and Time
text |Wang Rui-Xu
When the clock of the meaning of life begins to count down, what remains from our conditions of life? Or, in what kinds of states would life exist from this point on? Just as Heidegger said, “Being towards Death,” dying and dead are two different concepts—dead refers to the true physiological end of men, whereas dying is a process, which indicates that, being towards death, with every breath we take when we are alive, we breathe in less air; life will go through qualitative change with the countdown towards death, and as it fades, life will look for the meaning of own existence in the process, becoming “past being” that proves existence by passing away.
“And It Came to Pass” seems to leave behind no traces, but when facing the passing of time, Chu ChunTeng constantly shifts to and from, and back and forth, this point and that point, forming a loop of gaze on life faced with the passing of time. This loop does not remain in one spot, instead, it is statically suspended and dynamically arriving in the passing of time, freezing and sealing people with the very moment gazed upon by the artist; it transitions from the atmosphere of tranquility to the immersion of gaze, so that people indulge in the life conditions in the videos and cannot break away; it breaks free from binary thinking of subjectivity and objectivity, allowing the artist’s gaze, the objects in the videos, and audience’s perspectives, to jointly mirror a sonata of perceptions, and resonate with the suspended and arriving states of the facing of the passing in the works, drawing out own life experiences of audiences, as they are either ambushed by the past, quickly forgotten by the present, or left behind in the past by the future, so that we believe that the suspended and arriving states of being towards death are full of perceptive implosions, and segmented loop can better expose the truest and the most revealing self in front of time, and interpret the entirety of life, giving rise to a moment of resistance in life to more organically extend the agency of life.
From “Rhythm of Life” in 2006, “After” in 2011, to “Ever After”in 2019, Chu has long searched through his artworks the incommunicable intervals within life, subjects, events and objects, and consciously captures through gazes the “past being” towards death. Among these works, “August 15th” is the keystone of his gaze on the passing and existence of life, boosting the momentum of Chu’s latest creative work entitled “And It Came to Pass”in 2019. “And It Came to Pass” originates from Chu ChunTeng’s artist-in-residence experience in Chongqing in 2019. With a background in filmmaking, Chu captures the passing and existence of life of a mountain city in the ancient capital with rich history through the movement of camera; also, through unique personal view, he peels and explores the layers of the relationship between the passing and existence of life and history, culture, and society.
“And It Came to Pass” is Chu’s first solo exhibition that combs through own creative context. First, in terms of context, he abandons the use of linear timeline as a method of retrospection; instead, the core of his endeavor is a looping state of being towards death that flows through his creative context like a liquid. Moreover, in terms of exhibition format, he breaks the linear structure of narratives through multichannel videos and directorial installations, turning the exhibition venue into a space of montage, and weaving and constructing a narrative structure that is more of a pseudo-ecosystem. Audience can freely roam within, collecting and reassembling the various fragments of the loop of “past being” within his videos. In this exhibition, there are no narrations, and no narratives with excessive and deliberate descriptions; instead, there are gazes on the state of past being of life, partial actions without temporality yet they hegemonically intervene with the wholeness of time, accelerating the collision for the appearances of life as it is.