Exhibition/event has ended.

Choy Ka Fai "In Search of the Tragic Spirits"

Asakusa
Finished

Artists

Choy Ka Fai
Existing on the margins of societies, many shamanic communities in Asia today often take up forms of resistance against colonization and cultural homogeneity, according to Choy Ka Fai—a Singapore-born, Berlin-based multimedia artist a.k.a. the supernatural dance explorer. Choy spent 18 months from 2018 traveling through Central Asia and Southeast Asia, interviewing more than 50 local shamans for a project series called CosmicWander, which he later developed into a series of videos, dances, and installations. One such group he focused on is the Buryat people, who have been forced to nomadic conditions across borders mainly in Siberia, as well as various parts of Russia, Mongolia, northeastern China, and Central Asia.

The Buryats were originally a Mongolian-speaking group that wandered around Northeast Asia. In the early 20th century, some Buryats, escaping the chaos caused by the Russian Revolution, sought refuge in Outer Mongolia (present-day Mongolia). In the late 1930s, they were executed for being counter-revolutionaries and Japanese spies as a result of the Stalinist purges. After World War II, surviving Mongolian Buryats were recognized as an ethnic minority in the Mongolian state, while those who remained on the Russian side were institutionalized as a distinct minority under the Soviet Union, treated as inferior to Mongolian Buryats. Shamanism was also a target of oppression under communist regimes in the USSR and China. Shamanism, the belief in an eternal blue sky, has proliferated among the Buryat people, a diaspora without a nation-state, as they seek to rebuild a sense of belonging that has been shattered throughout the 20th century and address the grief of having been suppressed in various places across time and borders.

The solo exhibition of Choy Ka Fai at Asakusa, In Search of the Tragic Spirits, is a multimedia installation inspired by the Buryat shaman community. Visitors are invited to experience a fictional shamanic academy called Blue Sky Academy, where they can learn about Siberian shamanism through interviews with academy members and Buryat shamans. Constellation of the Flesh offers visitors an exceptional experience of a trans-natural world through a headset, where trance vibrations and virtual realities are synergized by the digital presence of a Siberian shaman. While shamans enter a state of altered consciousness, or trance, connecting with transcendent beings and summoning transhuman entities and ancestral spirits into their bodies, Choy Ka Fai utilizes digital technology to connect the dispersed memories, cultural adaptations and stories of these lands.

The imaginary communities emerging through the Internet also have the potential to reinstate old belief systems that were considered unscientific and irrational. Beyond the grasp of modern scientific and nation-state ideologies, these beliefs, fervently embraced or blindly followed, may be secretly coming back to life in the digital realm—a potential space for the invisible and the supernatural beings. The de-nationalized states of the modern Buryat shaman communities, which have survived on the frontier, not only awaken the souls and spirits of the past but also present a vision for the future.

Schedule

Jun 28 (Fri) 2024-Jul 15 (Mon) 2024 

Opening Hours Information

Hours
13:00-19:00
Closed
Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday

Opening Reception Jun 28 (Fri) 2024 17:00 - 19:00

FeeFree
Websitehttps://www.asakusa-o.com/en/tragicspirits/
VenueAsakusa
https://www.asakusa-o.com/en/
Location1-6-16 Nishi Asakusa, Taito-ku, Tokyo 111-0035
Access2 minute walk from exit 3 at Tawaramachi Station on the Ginza line, 5 minute walk from exit B at Asakusa Station on the Tsukuba Express line, 8 minute walk from exit 2 at Asakusa Station on the Toei Asakusa or Tobu Isesaki line.
Phone090-8346-3232
Related images

Click on the image to enlarge it

0Posts

View All

No comments yet