
Qing Lu – Uncanny Garden
Solo exhibition 'Uncanny Garden,' curated by Heli Hsu, featuring installation works by the Berlin-based Chinese artist Qing Lu from April 27th to May 24th, 2024.
A kind of garden. With goldfishes in a pond, it may bring to mind a certain image of a Chinese garden. But not a particular sort. With the coexistence of, say, glass hearts and plastic lightning it resists—refuses even—the very image it attempts to conjure. The garden, staged on-site—here in the gallery—through the appropriation of existent images that might predispose and hijack the audience’s interpretation is, as Craig Owens would have it, an allegory.
In the allegorical work, originality and authenticity are displaced; fragments take the lead. The strategy is, of course, collage. Since its invention, throughout the history of avant-garde, collage has been a critical means and technique to bring irreconcilable sources to an unfamiliar plane. And indeed, at the heart of Qing Lu’s exhibition is the fragmentation of life achieved by collage.

Installation view © Galerie Met and Qing Lu.
Distant and disparate media, forms, realities, cultures, temporalities and identities, rid of their original contexts, are truncated, then juxtaposed and assembled. Attention is directed to media themselves, and meanings are found in the arrangement.

Installation view © Galerie Met and Qing Lu.
Hence, a kind of New Year Painting (suichaotu) in which petals, leaves and clocks by no means speak of its association with the title—a genre of Chinese painting that wishes for auspiciousness at the beginning of a new year; a kind of image on corrugated cardboard for delivery that visualizes the transience of the transition—in the air and on the road, with origins and destinations unknown; a kind of plant and flower in ink on silk paper that disrupts living organism.

Installation view © Galerie Met and Qing Lu.
What glues different media in a work and, by extension, between works is resin—itself in a way a collage of the organic and the artificial.

Installation view © Galerie Met and Qing Lu.
To estrange the familiarity of objects and images from everyday life is to invoke the uncanny. With its derivation from the German word “unheimlich” (unhomely), the uncanny, an intriguing concept seen in various discourses in the arts since the early twentieth century, summons a feeling of unfamiliarity in what was once felt at home.

Installation view © Galerie Met and Qing Lu.
We have seen it, somewhere, but, somehow, here and now, no precise identification to name it. The uncanny, according to Claire Raymond, suggests a homeless and rootless state of the modern. A sense of belonging, intimacy and stability supplied by home is troubled.

Installation view © Galerie Met and Qing Lu.
It is in this displacement of home that we get a touch of Qing Lu’s works. They offer no fixed domicile, no cultural root, no definite identity, no true self, no promise of homecoming.

Installation view © Galerie Met and Qing Lu.
Yet, there is leaving. As in his garden of art, where parts and fragments can be orchestrated, however eerily, so in life. Identity changes on the move; meaning grows in the flow, if some risk of uncanniness is allowed.
–
Text by Heli Hsu.

Installation view © Galerie Met and Qing Lu.
Qing Lu
Uncanny Garden
April 27 – May 24, 2024
Mariannenstrasse 33, 10999 Berlin
Curator: Heli Hsu
https://galeriemet.com/exhibitions/qing-lu-uncanny-garden