Cleavage – Solo Exhibition

Cleavage

Solo Exhibition: VR,photograph with AR, 3D printed sculptures, and vidoe, Arcade Project Curatorial, Brooklyn, 2022

Chun Hua Catherine Dong's solo exhbition in New York

Chun Hua Catherine Dong's solo exhbition in New York

Chun Hua Catherine Dong's solo exhbition in New York

Chun Hua Catherine Dong's solo exhbition in New York

Chun Hua Catherine Dong's solo exhbition in New York

Chun Hua Catherine Dong's solo exhbition in New York

Chun Hua Catherine Dong's solo exhibition in New York

Chun Hua Catherine Dong's solo exhbition in New York

Solo Exhibition: Cleavage
March 11 to April 2, 2022
Arcade Project Curatorial
56 Bogart Street, Brooklyn NY 11206

Opening Reception: Friday, March 11, 6 to 9 pm

Cleavage refers to mitosis, a fundamental process for life. During mitosis, a cell duplicates all of its contents, including its chromosomes, and splits to form two identical daughter cells. Dong’s work explores the immigrant journey of identity: a splitting of the self into parts. The immigrant separates from their country of birth, entering their adopted country as the “other”. The immigrant becomes a person of two lands, not fully fitting in with either. When the immigrant returns to the land of their birth, they are not at home – they are visitors, tourists. The “home” that they hold as a memory is idealized in their mind. It doesn’t exist in the physical realm.

Skin Deep (2014-2020) explores the relationship between the concepts of shame and face in Chinese culture. Shame, or losing face, functions as a form of social control that prevents individuals—particularly women—from acting in ways that might disrupt the status quo. The series explores the concept of losing face in a series of photographic self-portraits, combined with an AR component, in which they conceal their face in traditional Chinese brocade silk fabrics that also comprise the background, signifying the loss of individual identity and absorption into a cultural identity.

Mulan (2022), a VR installation, inspired by the aesthetics of Beijing opera, splits the titular legendary heroine into two dueling warriors – shifting from singular to plural and back again. Mulan’s intense palette and undersea setting are references to Nudibranchs, colorful hermaphroditic mollusks that cannot self-fertilize and, despite having all the necessary equipment, require another to complete the reproductive cycle.

When I Was Born, My Father Said I Was Just Another Mouth to Feed, performance video (2010) and 3-D printed sculptures (2021), suggest that this cleavage of identity isn’t always complete: a ghost of the parents and their actions remains imprinted on the child. The bear’s four ears suggest a part of the child that has not completely separated. The bear’s pose is reminiscent of the prostration of both prayer and corporal punishment — a superimposed gesture of both hope and shame.

For more info about the review at Hyperallegic, please visit here

For more info about “Skin Deep,”,please visit here
For more about “Mulan,” please visit here
For more info about “When I was Born,”, please visit here


Chun Hua Catherine Dong would like to thanks The Canada Council for the Arts for its generous support