Past Residents
Past Resident2013: Institut Français
Hugues Reip
According to Clément Rosset, “philosophical illusionism is to announce meaning without demonstrating it, in the same way the magician brings his audience to see vanished objects by the mere power of suggestion.” The illusion, of course, occurs on the sly, in successive shifts. Just as sweat nestles in the pores of the skin, these stealthy yet controlled slips lie in the shadows, echoes and reflections of the world. Illusion, in its way, is an ode to gradualness. A fine line divides illusion from enticement, and Hugues Reip often crosses that line.
Hugues Reip’s (born 1964 in Cannes) recent solo exhibitions include Black Soul, Crystal Palace, Bordeaux; Archéocinéma, Kiné-Vision et autres Fantasmagories animées Le Nouveau Festival #2, MNAM Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; Parallel Worlds, M.O.T Museum, Tokyo and Eden, Safn Museum, Reykjavik. He also participated in the Dallas Biennale, Dallas Contemporary, Dallas; Futur Antérieur, Galerie du Jour-agnès b, Paris; À la Croisée des Images – vidéos de la collection Neuflize Vie, Maison Européenne de la Photographie, Paris; Echoes, Centre Culturel Suisse, Paris; Bob & Breakfast, Galerie Nelson-Freeman, Paris; New Wave Atlanta, Ernest G. Welch School of Art & Design Gallery, Georgia State University, Atlanta; 8e Nuit Blanche, Jardin du Luxembourg, Paris; V3 (Valosag a Kobon), 2B galéria, Budapest; Georges Méliès / Hugues Reip, Cinémathèque Française, Paris; Cosmos: en busca de los orígenes. De Kupka a Kubrick, TEA Tenerife Espacio de Las Artes, Santa Cruz de Tenerife and Presque Rien, Nylo (Living Art Museum), Reykjavik. He is the leader with Jacques Julien of the music band SPLITt. They have produced 3 records and performed at places including: Centre Culturel Suisse, Paris; In My Box, MNAM Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; Le Cargö, Caen. (Greil Marcus , The Beauty & The Beast); Steve McQueen Opening, Galerie Marian Goodman, Paris; Dogbowl / SPLITt, Le Deuxième Bureau, Genève and Summer WARM UP festival, PS1, New-York. Reip recently created an installation in the new Montrouge subway station in Paris and teaches art in the architecture school of L’école nationale supérieure d’architecture de Paris La Villette, Paris.
Residents from France
Past Resident2013: ACC - Asian Cultural Council
Yang Yeung
Yang Yeung runs the non-profit art organization Soundpocket, whose mission is to promote listening and sound as artistic practices. At Soundpocket, Yeung manages, organizes, curates andwrite essays on art and its relation to society.
Yang Yeung stumbled upon art in Hong Kong by accident. In 2008, she founded the non-profit art organization Soundpocket, an incubator and inquirer of the art of sound in Hong Kong. As director of Soundpocket, she manages, organizes, curates, and edits. She engages in the same activities independently, and is particularly concerned with the legitimacy of institutions regulating art and culture in Hong Kong. She realizes as she works that it is necessary to sustain critiques against authorities that promote domination. Yeung teaches classics at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.
Residents from Hong Kong
Simon Liu
Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, Alice and Lawrence Weiner, New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature, New York City Council District 34, New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, in partnership with the City Council, Brooklyn Borough President Antonio Reynoso, Hartfield Foundation, Danna and Ed Ruscha, The Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation
2026
Past Resident2013: Wallace Arts Trust
Yuki Kihara
The title of Yuki Kihara’s new body of work, Where do we come from? What are we? Where are we going?, is lifted from a large-scale painting by Paul Gauguin completed in 1897 shortly before he died in Tahiti. Kihara uses these questions to frame her examination of Samoan culture and society following the tsunami of 2009, last year’s celebration of the 50th anniversary of Samoa’s independence and, most recently, the destruction caused by Cyclone Evan. Taking inspiration from a late 19th-century photograph Samoan Half Caste by New Zealand photographer Thomas Andrew, Kihara dons a Victorian mourning dress and appears as her alter-ego ‘Salome’ photographed in selected locations across Upolu island Samoa that are pointed allusions to the social, religious, economic and political issues the artist wishes to highlight. Referencing the staged photographic postcards of the ‘South Seas’, Salome’s lone figure stands as silent witness to scenes of political, historical and cultural importance in present-day Samoa. She turns the camera on her country’s colonial past, the impact of burgeoning globalisation, ideas of indigeneity and the role of government in an independent Samoa. Kihara “unpacks the myth” of her country as an untouched Pacific paradise as seen through the eyes of colonial powers and tourist photographs.
A native of Samoa, Yuki Kihara is an interdisciplinary artist whose work has been presented at Asia- Pacific Triennial; Auckland Triennial and the Sakahàn Quinquennial. Kihara’s first solo museum exhibition in North America entitled Yuki Kihara; Living Photographs (2008-09) was held at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York following the acquisition of her works by the museum for their permanent collection. Kihara’s works and performances has also been shown internationally at de Young Museum, San Francisco; Museum of Contemporary Art, Australia; Te Papa Tongarewa Museum of New Zealand; Zendai Museum of Modern Art, Shanghai; Kaohsiung Museum of Fine Arts, Taiwan; National Museum of Poznan, Warsaw; Centro Ricerca Arte Attuale, Italy; Rautenstrauch Joest Museum, Colonge; Haus der Kulturen der Welt, Berlin; Musée du quai Branly, Paris; Trodheim Kunstmuseum, Norway and National Gallery of Canada. Kihara’s most recent mid-career survey exhibition entitled Undressing the Pacific presented at the Hocken Library will tour several NZ institutions throughout 2013/2014 organized by the University of Otago, NZ. A publication on Kihara’s work is currently being edited by art historian Erika Wolf.