A mini-fridge bathed in purple light sits on the floor with honey-like resin dripping off its right edge and a snail sticker on the lower left side of the door. A dish rack with preserved fruits sits on top of the fridge.

Mo Kong, Seeking The Common Ground, 2019. Mini freezer, handmade popsicles with newspaper confetti, dish racks, preserved tropical fruit, frozen cube fruit, plant lights, 18 x 19 x 27 inches.

Mo Kong: Making A Stationary Rain
On The North Pacific Ocean
Curated by Steffani Jemison
May 30 - July 11, 2019

Opening reception: Thursday, May 30, 6-8PM

Exhibition walk-through with Mo Kong and
Steffani Jemison:
Thursday, June 13, 6:30-7:30PM

CUE Art Foundation is pleased to present Making A Stationary Rain On The North Pacific Ocean, a solo exhibition by Mo Kong, curated by Steffani Jemison. Blurring fact and fiction, art and science, truth and near-truth, the artist turns the gallery into an immersive installation exploring a not-so-distant future in which China and the United States are in the midst of a political Cold War, echoed externally by an atmospheric antagonism rendered by climate change that has turned China and the U.S. into the hot and cold centers of the world.

Kong’s visual exploration of his own scientific and journalistic research uses climate change as a lens into contemporary geopolitics, neo-nationalism, human migration, human rights, and censorship, among other topics. Central to and grounding the exhibition, Kong has carefully gridded out the gallery with blue painter’s tape, delineating the latitudes and longitudes of the worlds within the installation. The grid marks coordinates, not countries; this is a type of mark-making that allows us to locate ourselves beyond national and temporal boundaries, but also allows our movement and migration to be tracked in turn via GPS. Placed throughout the gridded gallery, a rectangular glass vitrine sits on the floor filled with foam, salt, coal, and other materials, recalling the contents of the North Pacific Ocean; tubes of honey line the walls, referencing the practice of honey smuggling, trade wars, and human migration; sand, blown glass, and preserved fruit skins enclosed in a bent lead frame recall evaporated lakes; vertical poles representing weather stations symbolically observe and measure fictional climates; and scent diffusers pipe in natural oils associated with either country. 

Referencing Kong’s own experience as a recent Chinese immigrant to the United States, his past occupation as an investigative reporter, and the necessity of the self-censorship he learned to employ as an information strategy while making political art in China, the artist cloaks facts in fantasy in order to explore complex systems of thought surrounding environmental crises and sociopolitical issues. In her exhibition catalogue essay, Danni Shen writes that “Self-censoring has led to the artist’s process of filtering information–clues and hidden evidence–in such a way that viewers are able to draw connections between disparate points of reference. Under the camouflage of scientific research, the work’s political subject comes in and out of focus.” In Kong’s world, knowledge is not linear, information is not neutral, and truth does not require fact. But in order to evade or bypass a system or grid, one must learn to navigate it; and in order to arrive at or depart from a place, one must first learn where it ends and begins. The answers are not always as obvious as they appear.

A large rectangular glass vitrine sits on the floor, filled with yellow textured foam with different organic materials laying on its surface. Metal stands on the upper right and lower left corners hold up small fish bowls, each containing one beta f…

Mo Kong, Roundtable No. 2, 2017. Tape, foam, metal, glass, prints, marble, ceramic tiles, battle fish, 65 x 35 x 42 inches.

Mo Kong is a multidisciplinary artist and researcher born and raised in Shanxi, China, and currently residing in Brooklyn, NY. They received their MFA from the Rhode Island School of Design. They have had solo exhibitions at Artericambi Gallery, Verona and Chashama, NY, and their work has been included in exhibitions at the Queens Museum, NY, and the RISD Museum, RI. They have participated in fellowships and residencies at the Triangle Arts Association, the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, MASS MoCA Studio Residency, the Vermont Studio Center, Gibney Performance Center, and Chashama. Their work was featured in the book Brand New Art from China by Barbara Pollack and has been reviewed by Hyperallergic, the Wall Street International, The Round, and more.

Steffani Jemison’s work has been exhibited nationally and internationally, including MASS MoCA, Nottingham Contemporary, Jeu de Paume, the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum, the Brooklyn Museum, the Studio Museum in Harlem, the Drawing Center, LAXART, the New Museum of Contemporary Art, and others. Her work is in the public collections of the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum, the Brooklyn Museum, the Studio Museum in Harlem, and Kadist. Jemison has completed many artist residencies and fellowships, including the Radcliffe Institute Fellowship at Harvard University, Rauschenberg Residency, the Sharpe-Walentas Studio Program, Studio Museum in Harlem AIR, the Core Program at the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, and the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture. Jemison holds an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and a BA in Comparative Literature from Columbia University. She is an Assistant Professor in the Department of Art and Design at Mason Gross School of the Arts, Rutgers University New Brunswick.

The exhibition is accompanied by a 32-page color catalogue, with texts by Mo Kong, Steffani Jemison, and Danni Shen. The catalogue is available online and free of charge to gallery visitors. For more information please contact Programs Manager Lilly Hern-Fondation at lilly@cueartfoundation.org.

Download press release

View catalogue

Catalogue essay: endless rain, flora, honey, neo-nationalism by Danni Shen


Press

Barbara Pollack, “Mo Kong: Making A Stationary Rain On The North Pacific Ocean,” CoBo Social, July 3, 2019
Louis Bury, “Mo Kong Maps a Post-Climate Change Future,” Hyperallergic, July 6, 2019
June Gallery Peeping,” Cultured Magazine, June 17, 2019
"9 Art Events to Attend in New York," ARTnews, May 27, 2019