Larry Achiampong and David Blandy, Yarli Allison, Miku Aoki, Trisha Baga, Breakwater (Youngsook Choi and Taey Iohe), Ai Hasegawa and Boedi Widjaja.
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Part of the Radical Ancestry season
The speck, the droplet, the pixel.
From microcellular DNA to the proliferation of digital images, throughout all of time we have used science and technology to collect and share information about who we are. Discoveries have been made, patterns have been formed, and stories have been told, but always by those in power.
But who decides who belongs, and who writes our stories? How can we connect with our ancestry if it has been forgotten by history? To build fairer futures, we must question how the past has been controlled, and who (or what) has been left behind.
Future Ages Will Wonder presents an “alternative museum” of artworks that use science and technology to question our past and offer new ways of understanding who we are and where we belong.
The artworks on display bring together traditional mediums such as textiles, sculpture, and photography with virtual reality, computer algorithms and synthetic DNA to reimagine stories about our past, present and future. Through this wide range of materials and art-making, the exhibition refocuses where we place attention and what we value: reimagining stories about our past, present and future. Turning attention to alternative histories, the political and ethical issues found in archaeology, botany, genetics and the use of technology in our daily lives, visitors are invited to behold and ‘wonder’ at the advancement of science and technology.
Future Ages Will Wonder will premier three new commissions by artists Larry Achiampong and David Blandy (UK), Yarli Allison (Canada/Hong Kong), Breakwater (South Korea/UK), a new work by Boedi Widjaja (Singapore/Indonesia) alongside works by Ai Hasegawa and Miku Aoki (Japan), and Trisha Baga (USA). The exhibition is curated by Annie Jael Kwan, an independent curator, researcher and educator, who has collaborated with FACT over the last year to develop the show.
This exhibition marks the launch of Radical Ancestry, FACT’s year long exploration into the sense of belonging. Over the next 12 months, a programme of exhibitions, projects, residencies and events at FACT will look at how history, geography, biology and culture shape our ancestral history and question how technology can help us to explore new ways of thinking and experimenting with who we are.
Read the full curatorial text by Annie Jael Kwan
If you can't visit us at the moment - don't worry! Explore a virtual tour of the exhibition below. Navigate your way through the galleries, listen to an audio description of each artwork and experience the works in 360°.
An “alternative museum” of artworks that use science and technology to question our past...
CURATED BY ANNIE JAEL KWAN
Annie Jael Kwan is an independent curator and researcher whose exhibition-making, programming, publication and teaching practice is located at the intersection of contemporary art, art history and cultural activism, with interest in archives, histories, feminist, queer and alternative knowledges, collective practices, and solidarity. As co-director of Something Human, a curatorial initiative, she has presented live art projects across the UK and Europe, and launched the the pioneering Southeast Asia Performance Collection (SAPC) that represent 50 artists from the region at the Live Art Development Agency during the 2017 M.A.P. project. SAPC was then presented at the Archive-in-Residence “Southeast Asia Performance Collection” exhibition, along with the Pathways of Performativity in Contemporary Southeast Asian Art symposium at the Haus der Kunst in Munich, Germany. In 2018, she curated the exhibition and public programme, UnAuthorised Medium, at Framer Framed in the Netherlands.
She leads Asia-Art-Activism (AAA), an interdisciplinary, intergenerational research network launched in 2018, and currently in residence at Raven Row. AAA presented Till We Meet Again IRL, an expansive digital programme in 2020, and led Tools to Transform, a toolkit focused on creating resources for Asian and diaspora organising that received the European Cultural Foundation’s Culture of Solidarity grant in 2020, that was launched in 2021. She was the co-editor of Southeast of Now: Directions in Contemporary and Modern Art in Asia’s guest issue: Archives. She is a recipient of a Diverse Actions Leadership Award 2019, and currently teaches Critical Studies at Central St Martins, University of the Arts, London, and co-teaches Writing and Curating at KASK, School of Art, in Gent, Belgium. She is the instigating council member of Asia Forum, a platform discourses on contemporary global Asias, that will take place during the Venice Biennale in 2022.
FACT is funded by Arts Council England and Liverpool City Council. This exhibition is supported by Artsformation, which has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme. Artsformation is a research project exploring the intersection between arts, society and technology.
Fermented Flower (2021)
UK-based South Korean artists, Breakwater, confront the racist roots deeply embedded in the field of botany, which stem back to the Victorian era
Dust to Data (2021)
Dust to Data tracks through the colonial history of archaeology, to current parallels in the data mining of DNA and social media image banks.
In 1875 We Met At the Docks of Liverpool 於梨花埠遇上 (2021)
In this newly commissioned work, Yarli Allison reconstructs Liverpool’s old Chinatown and tells the stories of its lost Chinese sailors.
“zoe” (2021)
As part of major exhibition Future Ages Will Wonder, "zoe" (2021) is an installation environment with yarn, cloth, cotton, photographs and furniture recreating The Hunterian Museum and its collection.
by Miku Aoki
(Im)possible Baby, Case 01: Asako & Moriga (2015)
(Im)possible Baby, Case 01: Asako & Moriga (2015) is inspired by biotechnology and design solutions. The installation contains speculative design works considering the ‘traditional’ family unit.
by Ai Hasegawa
Shared Baby (2011/2019)
Shared Baby explores our beliefs in family and relationship structures, such as monogamy and kinship.
by Ai Hasegawa
1620 (2020)
In 1620, Trisha Baga deploys approaches used in sci-fi filmmaking and speculative fiction to explore the mythology of Plymouth Rock.
by Trisha Baga
Cigarette Cards - Ethnic-Chinese Seafarers in Britain 1900s (2021)
Set of 8 lightboxes displaying watercolour paintings inspired by vintage cigarette cards.
Dear Child, Guess Where This Is (2021)
This miniature diorama forms part of a multimedia installation exploring intergenerational grief and loss, telling the stories of Liverpool's lost Chinese sailors.
Dear Child, Guess What I've Seen Sailing (2021)
This hand-written letter forms part of a multimedia installation exploring intergenerational loss and grief and tells the story of Liverpool's lost Chinese sailors.
A Tree+++ 记因・基亿 (2021)
As part of major exhibition Future Ages Will Wonder, A Tree+++ 记因・基亿 (2021) is a dye-sublimation print on fabric suspended from a rig in the centre of the FACT building.
A tree rings, a tree sings 树龄°述铃 (2021)
Responding to his family’s multiple migrations during his early life, Boedi Widjaja’s work considers the limitations of language, and the arbitrary nature of its formation.
Nanyang (2019), Jawa (2019), Root Word (2021)
Part of major exhibition Future Ages Will Wonder, Nanyang (2019), Jawa (2019), Root Word (2021) are three backlit Duratran prints displayed on LED lightboxes. Each a unique visual writing system that tells a personal story about the artist's lineage.
Book of genealogy (2021)
This work features a sculptural lightbox displays photographs taken during his first visit to his ancestral hometown, alongside 20 encoded Chinese characters depicting the generational names recorded in his family’s book of genealogy.
Activity Sheet: Future Ages Will Wonder
Explore our current exhibition, Future Ages Will Wonder with your family in real life or online!
by FACT
Virtual Tour: Future Ages Will Wonder
Explore a virtual tour of Future Ages Will Wonder, a major group exhibition that presents an “alternative museum” of artworks that use science and technology to question our past and offer new ways of understanding who we are and where we belong.
by FACT
Podcast: Gaining Ground with Yarli Allison & Boedi Widjaja
Welcome to the first episode of our new podcast series, Gaining Ground, hosted by our curator-in-residence, Annie Jael Kwan. In this first episode, Annie chats with artists Yarli Allison and Boedi Widjaja whose work is on display at FACT for exhibition, Future Ages Will Wonder.
by FACT
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