Exhibition – AI Action Summit

I am very pleased to announce that my AI experiential videos are exhibited on four LED panels at Grand Palais, Paris, as part of AI Action Summit, created by Dominique Moulon.

In my project “For You I Will Be an Island,” I used AI as an experimenting tool, combining with memories from my childhood about the Yangtze River, where I grew up, to create a series of animated visuals that imagine how my hometown might look like in the future. AI’s vision of the future does not appear optimistic because it repeatedly depicts my hometown submerged in water or destroyed by storming waves, as if nature were reclaiming what we have taken for granted. However, it serves as a call to action for a more sustainable future and provokes dialogues about our collective responsibility towards nature. The project’s title, “For You I Will Be an Island,” suggests the nurturing essence of a mother. I sincerely hope that the Mother River will always be there for us, providing a safe island for not just her human children, but also other species to survive, no matter what our future may hold.”

This project also has a photograph and installation component. For photo series, please click here, for installation, please click here.

For more about the Summit, please visit here.

 
 
 

Solo Exhibition – VU

I am very pleased to announce that I am having a solo exhibition at VU.

Solo Exhibition: For You I Will Be an Island
Gallery: VU
Address: 580, Côte d’Abraham, Québec
Date: January 10 – February 23, 2025
Opening reception: January 10, 5-9pm

Often called the Mother River of China, the Yangtze bordered Chun Hua Catherine Dong’s childhood as she grew up along its shores. Having left her native country behind, Dong seeks to reconcile her memories and future visions of that landscape, now distant in both time and space. She employed generative AI to produce images of her home city in the future, the results showing waves crashing against the shores and flooded buildings. Behind these unreal images is the reality that the annual floods the Yangtze has experienced for centuries, which have proved devastating time and time again, have worsened in recent decades.

During one of her trips to China, Dong anchored her body in the present moment next to objects from her childhood and these menacing visions of the future. Souvenirs from her life with her now-deceased mother, along with food her mother once prepared, are juxtaposed with images of a nourishing yet chaotic river. Deeply attached to these original waters, Dong positions herself, before ruins of the past and future, as an island occupied by hopes for a more habitable world, along with the rituals and gestures that must be made to achieve it.

An exhibition presented in collaboration with Mois Multi.

 
 
 

Solo Exhibition – articule

I am very pleased to announce that I made a brand new body of works currently exhibiting at article in Montreal.

Solo Exhibition: I Wonder How I Wonder Why
Gallery: articule
Address: 6282 St-Hubert,Montréal, Québec, Canada H2S 2M2
Date: November 1 – December 14, 2024
Opening reception: November 1, 5-8pm

Dong transforms a scientific laboratory into an imaginative stage where the boundaries of gender, power, and social control are redefined. Through a blend of VR video, animation, light, 3D-printed sculptures, and ready-made objects, Dong combines elements of scientific presentation with childhood memories, creating an immersive, sensory-rich experience both experimental and personal.

Drawing on early encounters with Western culture while growing up in China, Dong uses the song “Lemon Tree”, by the German band Fool’s Garden, as a symbolic, aspirational fantasy of Western life: bright, carefree, and filled with promise. For Dong, this fantasy was shaped through cultural exports like music, media, and fashion, offering an idealized, unattainable version of the West. In this project, Dong bridges the gap between the imagined promises of Western life and the complex realities of growing up in the East, transforming bittersweet childhood memoirs into acts of resistance and empowerment.

Dong uses the laboratory as a metaphorical site where fantasies are deconstructed, reassembled, and transformed. The lab becomes a space of transformation – not simply for scientific experimentation, but for challenging cultural constructs, reimagining identity, and crossing geographic and ideological boundaries. “I Wonder How I Wonder Why” is a space where East and West, science and imagination, reality and fantasy intersect, inviting reflection on how personal and cultural narratives shape our understanding of ourselves and the world, and how these narratives can open new possibilities for self-expression.


Times Square Arts –Mulan

I am very pleased to announce that my VR work, Mulan, will be screening at Times Square, NYC, on 95 large billboard digital screens from 41 to 49 street, August 1 -31, 2024, presented by Times Square Arts and Galerie Charlot Paris

For more about “Mulan” at Times Square Art, please visit here

For more info about “Mulan”, please visit my website link here.

A video-based work created through virtual reality, Chun Hua Catherine Dong’s Mulan reimagines the legendary Chinese folk heroine of the same name to explore gender and the plasticity and plurality of the body. Inspired by ancient Chinese storytelling, performance traditions, and marine biology, Dong used 3D VR tools to create an imaginary aquatic fantasy world where Mulan disguises her identity and gender, in order to coexist and become one with the nudibranch — a colorful deep-sea organism with striking forms, unique defenses, and ambiguous gender identities. Ultimately Mulan becomes not only a hybrid being, but a part of the surrounding marine ecosystems. Donning the protagonist in a colorful Beijing Opera costume and staging her on the rainbow-hued nudibranch, Dong proposes the pluralities within this folk character, and challenges historically male-dominated theater traditions.

Mulan was created in collaboration with Kudo Albus, a digital artist in Shanghai.

“Through performative gestures and expressions, I re-interpret Mulan from a feminist perspective. This work also raises questions about the binary system, about how to merge the boundaries of self/other, culture/nature, and human/animal, creating a new social relation that supports different ways of living and diverse beings in order to sustain and survive.” — Chun Hua Catherine Dong

Chun Hua Catherine Dong (she/they) is a Chinese-born Tiohtià:ke/ Montréal-based multimedia artist. Dong’s artistic practice is based in performance art, photography, video, VR, AR, and 3D printing within the contemporary context of global feminism. Body is political. Dong began their artistic career as a performance artist. Working within the gap between body as image and body as experienced reality, Dong uses the body—often their own body— as a visual territory in their work and a primary material to activate social commentary on gender, identity, and immigration. By encapsulating these global issues in microcosm or magnifying personal predicaments until they become universally visible, Dong presents the body as an embodiment of dynamic human relations, locating themselves at the nexus of author, artwork and audience.

Dong received an MFA in Intermedia from Concordia University and a BFA at Visual Art from Emily Carr University Art & Design in Canada. Dong has exhibited their works at The International Digital Art Biennial Montreal (BIAN),  The International Biennial of Digital Arts of the Île-de-France (Némo), MOMENTA | Biennale de l’image, Kaunas Biennial, The Musée d’Art Contemporain du Val-de-Marne in France, Quebec City Biennial, Foundation PHI for Contemporary Art, Canadian Cultural Centre Paris, Museo de la Cancillería in Mexico City, The Rooms Museum, Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21, DongGong Museum of Photograph in South Korea, He Xiangning Art Museum in Shenzhen, Hubei Museum of Fine Art in Wuhan, The Aine Art Museum in Tornio, Bury Art Museum in Manchester, Art Museum at University of Toronto, Varley Art Gallery of Markham, Art Gallery of Hamilton, and more.

Valérie Hasson-Benillouche founded Galerie Charlot in 2010 with the aim to champion innovative practices in contemporary art. Attentive to artistic experimentation, Galerie Charlot develops a reflection on the relationship between art, technology and science.Through its pioneering attitude, Valérie Hasson-Benillouche has created a space dedicated to contemporary art where her expertise in the world of digital art brings together artists, collectors and scientists. The gallery’s calendar is punctuated by conferences and performances around digital art and its place in contemporary art. It exhibits emerging, mid-career and established artists.Partnerships with galleries, institutions and curators are key points to develop the gallery’s international influence, as well as participation in festivals, off-site exhibitions, round tables and fairs in Paris, Basel, Brussels and New York, among others.

Partner of the Nemo Festival, member of the Arcadi jury, and Laguna Price Venezia, Valérie has been part of the SIGGRAPH Paris Reflection Committee and participates in various conferences, including those held at Elektra-Montreal, ArtBrussel, and Ars Electronica-Linz. She develops specific projects with companies such as Hermes, Société Générale, Audemars Piguet, Oddo Bank, C21 Hotels, and Shiseido. She is also a member of the CPGA and is on the committee of the FHDN Foundation and the Digital Humanities Foundation.Valérie and her team are dedicated to the development of digital art as a major art form, an essential part of contemporary art.


Support for Midnight Moment is provided in part by the National Endowment for the Arts; the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature; public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council; and the Times Square Advertising Coalition.

Midnight Moment is made possible by the Times Square Advertising Coalition, ABC SuperSign, American Eagle, Big Outdoor, Branded Cities, Clear Channel, Coca-Cola, Diversified, Express, Heritage Outdoor Media, Levi’s, LG, Line Friends, McDonald’s, Microsoft, Midtown Financial, Morgan Stanley, New Tradition, Outfront, Paramount, Prudential, Sensory Interactive, Sephora, Sherwood Equities, Show + Tell, Silvercast, Swatch, TSX, and T-Mobile.


Exhibition – Ottawa Art Gallery

I am very pleased to announce that my performance photograph  “Unmask Opera,” 3D printed sculpture,” Gold Girl,” and ” Phoenix Crown” are exhibiting at Ottawa Art Gallery. For more about this exhibition, please visit here

Through the Ground Glass1 is a dialogue between the work of historical Ottawa photographer William James Topley and six contemporary artists: Lori Blondeau, Chun Hua Catherine Dong, Anique Jordan, Neeko Paluzzi, Adrian Stimson and Geneviève Thauvette. These artists engage with image manipulation, hauntology, costumes and theatricality to subvert narratives and reclaim power through portraiture.

Topley’s use of the composite technique (akin to cut-and-paste collage) demonstrates photography’s ability to craft powerful narratives. Similarly, the contemporary artists in this exhibition harness the principle of this technique to resist, reconstruct and critique, in order to catalyze new realities.

 


Solo Exhibition – Bannister Art Gallery

I am very pleased to announce that solo exhibition “Share Distance: Where the Links Flow” will be held at Bannister Art Gallery, Rhode Island Collage, Providence, USA

Date:
October 5 -27, 2024
Opening event:

October 7, 2023 at 4:00pm – 6:00pm

Featuring virtual reality (VR), augmented reality (AR), 3D-printed sculptures, video installation, and AI-generated visuals, Shared Distance: Where the Links Flow provides an insight into the recent creations of Chun Hua Catherine Dong, a multimedia artist based in Montreal. This exhibition takes viewers into a journey where art and technology collide, examining how digital diasporic experiences have shaped the notion of home and self with the rise of digitalization. The artist weaves the complexities of displacement, resilience, childhood memories, and the longing for connection into a thread that links geographic, cultural, and emotional distances, as well as bridges gaps between memories and experiences, the tangible and the virtual, and culture and nature through the lens of gender and the context of diaspora.

For more info about the exhibition, please visit here


Group Exhibition – Art Gallery of Hamilton

I am very pleased to announce that my work “Out of the Blue” is part of group exhibition, “WONDER: the Real, the Surreal, and the Fantastic,” curated by Tobi Bruce, at the Gallery of Hamilton, Hamilton, Ontario

Date:
September 23, 2023 – January 7, 2024
Opening event:October 12, 2023 at 7:00pm – 10:00pm

What is ‘reality’ today? What does it mean to be ‘real’? Is there even such a thing?In an age of reality shows, fake news, and weakened social and political structures, our sense of reality is quickly shifting. Neither fixed nor factual, our individual realities can exist alongside one another’s and never meet.

This moment in time led to the idea of creating an exhibition around the idea of reality and sur-reality, or in art terms: Realism, Surrealism and the Fantastic.  This exhibition explores the relationship between a logical view of life and the unconscious mind, fantasies, and the dream world.

The artists in this show find magic in the unexpected and the unnatural, the overlooked and the odd.  Their work challenges values and norms in search of new realities and freedom. Here, imagination is front and centre and driven by the psychological rather than the logical.

Organized by theme, the exhibition brings together works by historical and contemporary artists who reflect and reimagine the body and the everyday in staging new and provocative worlds.

For more info about the exhibition, please visit here


Solo Exhibition – The Rooms

I am very pleased to announce that my solo exhibition, “At the Edge of Two World” will be held at The Rooms, St.John’s, NL.

Date:
February 11, 2023 – April 16, 2023
Opening:
Feb 11 at 7:30pm – 10pm
Where:
Level 3 Natural Light Art Gallery

The work of Chun Hua Catherine Dong blurs the boundaries of here and there, the actual and the virtual, as she considers how ideas of home and self are changing with the rise of digitalization and globalization. Working in 3D printing, augmented reality, performance art, photography, video, and virtual reality, Dong explores the body—often her own body—to activate social commentary on gender, cultural identity, migration and digital diaspora. Throughout, envisioned futures dissolve binaries and borders as identity is lost, created and re-created.

For more info about the exhibition, please visit here


Exhibition – the International Digital Art Biennial (BIAN), Montreal
I am very pleased to announce that I will participate the 6th of the International Digital Art Biennial (BIAN), organized by ELEKTRA at Arsenal Contemporary Art, Montreal. My large inflatable sculpture, ” The Soft Porcelain,” will be exhibited at Arsenal Contemporary Art, Dec 1, 2022 – Feb 5, 2023.
 

Presented by ELEKTRA since 2012, the International Digital Art Biennial (BIAN) is back for a 6th edition this winter at Arsenal Contemporary Art Montreal. Our major exhibition, entirely dedicated to contemporary digital art, will be held from December 1, 2022 to February 5, 2023.

To close this cycle around metamorphosis, 26 artists from 4 continents will address the process of MUTATION, through the mobility and movement of human beings, ideas or identities. This exhibition offers a reflection on the transition that we must accomplish in this post-pandemic era disrupted both geopolitically and climatically. By taking a look at our time while trying to anticipate the consequences of our past and future decisions, these artists are in a way pathfinders, messengers.

Co-curated by DooEun Choi, Art Director of Hyundai ArtLab Seoul and Alain Thibault, General and Artistic Director of ELEKTRA.

 
For more info about Biennial and my work, please visit here

 

 


Commissioned Public Art – Nuit Blanche Toronto

Commission Project: Skin Deep
Commissioned by: City of Toronto
Curated by: Julie Nagam
Nuit Blanche Toronto
October 1-2, 2022, 7:00pm -7:00am
North York Centre Library 
5120 Yonge St, North York, ON M2N 5N9

Symposium: A Home for our Migrations
Artscape Daniels Launchpad, Sugar Hall, Toronto
September 29, 2022, 11:15am – 12:30pm

Chinese shame is rooted around the concept of face which refers to a cultural understanding of respect, honor and social standing. Shame is used as a tool of social control and harmony, as a way to prevent citizens— especially women—from acting in ways that might disrupt the status quo. Dong creates a series of ID card photographs with faces concealed in Chinese traditional silk fabrics. The act of masking is a performance of submission to the powerful effects of shame in which Dong obliterates their own individuality while being completely absorbed into a cultural identity. It refers both to the quality of only being seen for Dong’s Chinese background as an immigrant in Canada, and the subsequent lack of acknowledgement of their full personhood as a girl when in China. “Skin Deep” is an act of drawing back the curtain and pointing to the deeply embedded feelings of shame that can cause women to hold back and stay silent, transforming the performative gestures into experiences that are understood to be universal and relatable.

For more info about the project, please click here
For more info about the project at Nuit Blanche website, please click here