Artists: Noor Abed & Mark Lofty, Christopher Gregory-Rivera, Utsa Hazarika, Cici Wu & Yuan Yuan
Curated in collaboration with Carmen Amengual
Curated in conjunction with Carmen Amengual’s installation in the adjoining gallery, To trace the line where your body cut the air explores the ways information can alternatively be recovered or obscured via memory, personal encounters, architecture, and historical record. Across multiple media including found and staged video, photography, text, sound, and sculpture, the artworks on display embody an ethos of collaboration and collective experience, each following distinct threads present in Amengual’s work. The title takes from a line in Carmen Amengual’s film, A Non-Coincidental Mirror, wherein the artist tried to physically follow in her late mother’s footsteps in order to unearth details of the first Third World Filmmakers Meeting in Algiers.
The connective pathways of migratory diaspora are central to this exhibition, reverberating amidst the backdrop of the current moment’s ongoing wars. As such, these works are limited by their respective repositories, leaning on the roles of various storage media as the vessels for communication. The artists challenge and uncover the inherent loss—and at times forced entropy—of recordkeeping. Their works explore the intersections between official histories in their idealized form and the messy incompleteness of lived experience, all in relation to various increasingly autocratic infrastructures. Through encounters with strangers, state archives, shared video diaries, and scholarship, the resultant language that circulates appears as fragments, tactics, abstraction, poetics, and warnings against patterns of suppression.
Included in this exhibition are excerpts from Christopher Gregory Rivera’s ongoing project Las Carpetas (2014- ), which reimagines political memory in Puerto Rico by rescuing, photographing, and appropriating archives from a secret police division dedicated to political persecution in the US Territory. He is also showing for the first time raw footage from a leaked police video of protests in 2017, highlighting how the practice of political persecution is not only alive and well but increasingly relevant in understanding the current cultures of digital policing. Noor Abed and Mark Lofty’s One Night Stand (2019) is an experimental documentary based on a real encounter with an unknown European anti-ISIS fighter that was secretly recorded on a cell phone. Through a re-staged simulation of this conversation, the filmmakers probe questions of ideological loyalties to the concept of freedom, distinctions between citizens and soldiers, and the potentials of representation through the documentary form.
Utsa Hazarika’s installation picks up on the investigation in Amengual’s A Non-Coincidental Mirror that examines the potential for architecture to leave impressions on bodies and on memories. In Twilight, Two Lights (2024), Hazarika appropriates text fragments from postcolonial scholarship, protest chants, news reports, and archival audio from artists and activists from the British Commonwealth and South Asia. These words are refracted through a translucent neon lattice work frame in the form of a disrupted and glitched South Asian jaali–an ornamental patterned architectural screen–as well as available as audio. The combination of the contrasting viewpoints of the text, image, and audio produces a hybrid space where new identities emerge. Departing from the softness of the gesture, Cici Wu’s work uses the techniques and forms of cinema to uncover aspects of archives and microhistories. The film Belonging and Distance is a long-distance collaborative endeavor with Beijing-based queer photographer Yuan Yuan that unfolded from 2022 to 2023. The work weaves together 16mm film fragments with DV video, tracing the indexicality of notions such as “diasporic” and “migratory.” Traversing through scenes from East Broadway Mall in New York’s Chinatown during the pandemic and Beijing in lockdown, family, a memorial site of the June Fourth Incident, Chang’An avenue, Dongdan park, and underground queer parties, the film ends with footage from the cross-harbor tunnel in Hong Kong, which references the siege of Hong Kong Polytechnic University, suggesting a migratory aesthetics as an experimental means of repair.
The contributing artists each speak from different geopolitical contexts and experiences, and yet their work is bound by the implicit solidarity with one another’s histories and continued existence. Together these works gesture towards the stated goals of Amengual’s primary research subject, the first and second Third World Filmmakers Meetings: to share strategies that run counter to top-down hegemonic rule and norms. The methods employed here do not simply offer solutions to these issues, but claim space to document stories and perspectives, attesting to the soft power of witness. The sentiment marks an attempt to capture the intangible–or at least that which modern methods of documentation cannot hold.
This exhibition is part of the Close Readings exhibition series and is curated in conjunction with Carmen Amengual, A Non-Coincidental Mirror, co-presented with the Vera List Center for Art and Politics at The New School. Close Readings presents a new commission by one under-recognized, early, or mid-career artist in Gallery One, along with an accompanying exhibition in Gallery Two that uses the central commission as a curatorial framework. This program extends our support for interdisciplinary artists by building conversations around their practices in addition to facilitating the realization of ambitious, site-specific projects.
Bios:
Noor Abed is an interdisciplinary artist and filmmaker. Her practice examines notions of choreography and the imaginary relationship of individuals, creating situations for alternative social and representational models in Palestine.
Mark Lofty is an Alexandrian artist, filmmaker and producer. His work explores the boundaries between fiction, documentary, and new media art, and questions the everyday, contingent and the virtual. He co-founded with his fellows in 2005 the production space ‘Fig Leaf Studios’ with the mission of supporting independent filmmakers and artists in Egypt.
Utsa Hazarika is an artist and writer based in New York. Her research-based practice ranges across video, sound, installation, sculpture and text, and explores how an interdisciplinary dialogue between art and social research can push us to think about power, memory and resistance. Her work has been exhibited internationally, including at Socrates Sculpture Park, Hessel Museum of Art, and Museum of the City of New York in the United States. She attended the Whitney Independent Study Program, and has been awarded residencies and fellowships in Asia and the United States, including Pioneer Works (US), Queens Museum (US), and Lijiang Studio (China), and Khoj International Artists’ Association (India). She holds an MFA in Fine Arts from The New School, where she was awarded the President’s Scholarship; and an MPhil in Social Anthropology from the University of Cambridge, where she was awarded Christ College’s Levy-Plumb Award for the Humanities. Her research has been published in Ethnos: Journal of Anthropology (UK), Trans Asia Photography Review (US) and The Caravan (India).
Christopher Gregory Rivera is a Puerto Rican artist living between New York City and Madrid, Spain.
His work is particularly interested in rescuing, deconstructing and reconfiguring historic narratives through documentary, still life and archival research to promote a better understanding of the present.
His work has been awarded by PhotoEspaña, Aperture/Paris Photo Book Prize, Rencontres Arles, the Magnum Foundation and exhibited at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Puerto Rico, Museum of Contemporary Photography in Chicago, Institute of Contemporary Art of Maine and the Abrons Arts Center in New York.
Cici Wu was born and raised in Beijing and Hong Kong, and currently lives and works in New York. Reducing filmmaking to its most humble and elemental components, she creates drawings, objects, videos, and installations which extend the imaginative and structural premises of cinematic language across a wide range of media. Often taking local microhistories or archives as a point of departure, Wu uses the cinematic frame as a means to negotiate and reflect on the ways in which transpersonal narratives of social, cultural and historical belonging structure our experiences of self.
Yuan Yuan, formerly based in Beijing, currently living and studying in the Netherlands. With a background in literature and language, writing serves as the foundation of their artistic practice, often evolving with their image practice parallel. Their works explore the intersection of the collective unconscious and the cosmos, delving into themes of belonging and displacement, with an ongoing focus on minority groups.
Image: Christopher Gregory Rivera, excerpt from Las Carpetas (2014- ). Courtesy the Archivo General de Puerto Rico, San Juan.
This exhibition is supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, New York City Council Member Lincoln Restler, and the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature, and with generous support from The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Robert Lehman Foundation, Select Equity Group Foundation, many individuals and Smack Mellon’s Members.
Smack Mellon’s programs are also made possible with public funds from the National Endowment for the Arts and with generous support from The Edward and Sally Van Lier Fund of The New York Community Trust, Jerome Foundation, Ruth Foundation for the Arts, Lily Auchincloss Foundation, Wolf Kahn Foundation, Cornelia T. Bailey Foundation, Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation Inc, The Roy and Niuta Titus Foundation, and an Anonymous Donor.
In-kind donations and services are provided by Materials for the Arts, NYC Department of Cultural Affairs/NYC Department of Sanitation/NYC Department of Education and Sage and Coombe Architects.
Space for Smack Mellon’s programs is generously provided by the Walentas family and Two Trees Management.