Gallery  January 20, 2025  Katy Diamond Hamer

David Castillo Gallery Showcases Asian Art Through “Alien/ΛᄂIΣП”

Courtesy the artist & David Castillo

“Alien” curated by Yesiyu Zhao @ David Castillo, installation image. 

The group exhibition, Alien /ΛᄂIΣП, at David Castillo Gallery brings together over 40 artists from the Asian diaspora. Curated by artist Yesiyu Zhao, there is a focus on the many uses and meanings of the word alien. From science fiction fantasies and the contemplation othering, to immigration and displacement, the artists in the exhibition wade through these territories with grace and unabashed fervor. 

Largely highlighting paintings, a few sculptural works add a textural element to the space. Yesiyu Zhao’s own Pink Flamingo (2024) is a rust-colored porcelain work, a bisected figure balanced on a bed of sand on a pedestal. 

Courtesy the artist & David Castillo

Huidi Xiang, i’m on it, 包在我身上, 2024, 3-D Printed resin, cloth, reciprocating swing motor, 9 1/2 x 10 x 5 1/2 inch, Edition of 3 plus 1 AP (#3/3). “Alien” curated by Yesiyu Zhao @ David Castillo.

Similarly ambiguous is Twisted bones: A hug (2023) by Liu Xin. Xin’s work hangs on the wall and includes two mouths without a face hurling bone-like tendrils made of bronze and porcelain teeth. 

A third sculptural work is i’m on it, 包在我身上 by Huidi Xiang. While this piece has a more representational quality than the other aforementioned works, it is a disjointed cartoon-ish hand made of 3D printed resin, motorized and holding a washcloth. 

It emits an invisible whisper, a notation that encompasses generational labor, class structures, and care. Each of these works could have fallen out of the paintings that are present.

In The Fifer (피리는여인), a 2024 oil on linen work by artist Sun Woo, a lone faucet appears in a dark crevice or cave. It emerges from the ground not unlike the head of a serpent or a smaller version of the infamous sandworms of Lynch’s 1984 filmDune. There is an emotional current pulsating in the painted ground, but also functioning as a connector between the artists present. 

Courtesy the artist & David Castillo

Sun Woo, The Fifer (피리부는여인), 2024, Oil on linen, 16 x 10 ⅔ Inches. “Alien” curated by Yesiyu Zhao @ David Castillo.

Simultaneously uplifting and oppressive, dictionary.com defines the word alien as “a creature from outer space; extraterrestrial, a resident of one country who was born in or owes allegiance to another country and has not acquired citizenship by naturalization in the country of residence, a foreigner, a plant or animal species not originating where it is found.” 

Yanqing Pei seems to address this conglomerate of meanings head-on with their oil painting TBD (2024). The work features a softly colored, grey-toned palette and a figure buried under a plant resembling a tulip with pointed and spindly leaves. 

We only see one eye and the subject’s nose peering skyward and wonder, “Were they transported into a land whose soil is less than accommodating?” The gaze could be read as cautious, scared, or perhaps just disillusioned. 

Courtesy the artist & David Castillo

Lily Wong, Arriving, 2024, Acrylic on Paper, 13.75 x 22.5 inches. “Alien” curated by Yesiyu Zhao @ David Castillo.

Yesiyu Zhao constructs a narrative with Alien /ΛᄂIΣП that is as comforting as it is disarming. Not dissimilar from the immigrant experience or that of the displaced, the work references moments of collective cultural memories, such as those represented by tea ceremonies, gardening, and mask making.

Courtesy the artist & David Castillo

Amanda Ba, Knockout, 2024, Oil on canvas, 24 x 30 inches. “Alien” curated by Yesiyu Zhao @ David Castillo. 

However, simmering below the surface is an uncertainty or defiance. This might be most evident in Knockout (2024) by Amanda Ba and Self Portrait: Dragon Girl (2024) by Song Kun. 

Ba’s Knockout features a female-presenting figure getting punched in the face, their left cheek red and bruised from a strike, now frozen in time. 

Kun’s painting features a soft glowing pink surrounding a shrouded figure, eyes peering outward, ready to strike. In one instance, it’s as if the figure in Self Portrait: Dragon Girl exists in a moment outside the frame for Knockout. Each of these two figures are engaged in a battle of sorts with unseen opponents, but somehow feel like heroes. 

Song Kun, Courtesy the artist & David Castillo, Miami & Hive Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing | Shanghai

Song Kun, Self Portrait: Dragon Girl, 2024, Oil on Canvas, 49 x 35 ½ inches. “Alien” curated by Yesiyu Zhao @ David Castillo. 

Kun visage is loosely defined by an oil sketch of a dragon that appears to wrap around their body. It might be the most important work in the show, as a stance is taken, form contorted, histrionics embraced, and fortitude is presented— an unwavering strength. 

This exhibition is the first of its kind in Miami and gleefully declares so by spotlighting the Asian diaspora work shipped from Antwerp, Austin, Bangkok, Beijing, Berlin, Brooklyn, Chicago, Hong Kong, Huangshan, London, Los Angeles, New York, Newark, Seoul, Shanghai, and Tokyo. 

The variation and diversity of cities alone challenge the viewer to contemplate the Asian experience on a global scale. These makers have the opportunity to be part of a type of unveiling, peeling apart layers of an onion skin in order to get to the core, where unbeknownst to some, a diamond lives. Once light hits that space, all it can do is shine. 

About the Author

Katy Diamond Hamer

Katy Diamond Hamer is an art writer with a focus on contemporary art and culture. Writing reviews, profiles, interviews and previews, she started the online platform Eyes Towards the Dove in 2007 and was first published in print in 2011 with Flash Art International. Interview highlights include Robert Storr, Helmut Lang, Courtney Love, and Takashi Murakami. Taking a cue from art writers such as Jerry Saltz and movements such as Arte Povera (Italy, 1962-1972), Hamer believes that the language used to describe contemporary art should be both accessible to a large audience as well as informed regarding art historical references. Clients include Almine Rech, Hauser & Wirth, Grand Life, The Creative Independent, Art & Object, Artnet, Cool Hunting, BOMB, Cultured Magazine, Galerie Magazine, Flash Art International, W Magazine, New York Magazine (Vulture), The Brooklyn Rail and others.  Hamer is an Adjunct Faculty member at New York University, Steinhardt School of Education, and Sotheby's Institute of Art. Previously she taught Continuing Education at the New York School of Interior Design.

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