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NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Art > Shu Lea Cheang’s Artwork of Hacking 
Shu Lea Cheang’s Artwork of Hacking 
Art

Shu Lea Cheang’s Artwork of Hacking 

Last updated: July 7, 2025 7:47 am
Editorial Board Published July 7, 2025
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Set up view of Shu Lea Cheang, “Home Delivery” (2025) (all photographs Ela Bittencourt/Hyperallergic)

MUNICH — After I first noticed Shu Lea Cheang’s work on the Munich Worldwide Movie Competition two years in the past, she buoyantly suggested her viewers to sneak out to the lavatory or depart the cinema if her porn-infused science-fictions’ graphic intercourse scenes overwhelmed (or, wink, impressed) them — a cheeky problem only a few viewers took up. I feel that anecdote would possibly simply sum up the Taiwanese-American artist’s distinctive mix of artwork, tech, and porn, or her penchant for provocation.

At first look, Cheang’s extra somber science- and technology-minded survey, Shu Lea Cheang: Kiss Kiss Kill Kill at Haus der Kunst, comprising work culled from the previous three a long time, has little to do together with her erotic fantasies, equivalent to her movie I.Ok.U. (2000), depicting orgasms and sperm as shiny commodities, or the lesbian intercourse reverie “Sex Fish” (1993). For one, there’s hardly any flesh to see right here. This doesn’t imply, nevertheless, that Cheang tempers her method; the physique could be very a lot current, albeit much less straight. And whereas the exhibition’s mise-en-scène is extra spare than one would anticipate from her typical intense technicolor dystopias, Cheang’s febrile, fantastical narratives make this comparatively compact survey really feel like far more than the sum of its components.

Take, for example, Cheang’s set up “Spoken Words” (2025), which mixes components of her earlier works, “Baby Work” (2012) and “Utter” (2023). From the latter, she reprises an animated avatar whose gender and race hold altering. This determine is proven on a big central display screen, at first gagged, then disgorging laptop computer keys (a few of these lie on the ground within the nook). In the meantime, it borrows from the previous work the varied keyboards set on low platforms surrounding the display screen. Strike the keys to listen to phrases uttered aloud — I caught “suck,” “nipple,” “dildo,” and “mistress,” suggesting that Cheang is primarily all for sexual language AI applied sciences could censor.

Portal Porting 2025 derived from Composting the Net 2012 and Portal to the Next 2022 Installation detail

Set up view of Shu Lea Cheang “Portal To The Next” (2022), tree trunks and logs, shiitake mushrooms, audio system, sensors, laptop, metallic, rust, plastic, rubber, spray paint on metallic

Extra broadly, one would possibly say that Cheang is anxious with the methods know-how allows not solely commodification but in addition management of all human exercise, from communication to nourishment to intercourse. In her set up “Home Delivery” (2025), for instance — once more that includes components drawn her earlier work, on this case “Drive By Dining” (2002) — two robots transfer alongside tracks, choosing up cardboard containers, like those utilized in meals deliveries, and throwing them into piles alongside the partitions. The robots’ soundless choreography is rote and inflexible; it soberly conveys the extent to which even essentially the most primal of human wants, equivalent to consuming, now depend on technological networks. But “Home Delivery” takes on a unique tenor when you learn the exhibition textual content, which explains that Cheang imagines the machines as a part of a post-food supply future through which robots now aimlessly retrace their routes.

“Home Delivery” additionally hints at Cheang’s method to technological waste, viewing it on the one hand as a literal, bodily atmosphere threatening to engulf the human and on the opposite as a renewable useful resource, similar to natural materials. This concept underpins Cheang’s final giant set up at Haus der Kunst, “Portal Porting” (2025), derived from “Composting the Net” (2012) and “Portal to the Next” (2022). The previous consists of a number of screens with operating textual content sourced from web mailing lists, which appeared to vary from artist proposals to tutorial papers. One can pause them by hanging keyboard keys. Standing within the midst of the set up feels very very similar to info overload, like being awash in information. Cheang, nevertheless, appears to view it extra as a supply to repurpose or probably hack into. This hopeful message is embodied by the central object within the room, drawn from “Portal to the Next”: a burned-out automotive wreck sprouting giant fungi, surrounded by giant tree trunks that will have precipitated the crash, likewise blooming fungi. The work appears to counsel that info networks and information are additionally fungi- or spore-like: Their DNA, so to talk, comprises the blueprint for suppression, but in addition for liberation.

Spoken Words 2025 derived from Baby Work 2012 and Utter 2023 Installation view 1

Shu Lea Cheang, “Portal Porting” (2025)

Liberation would possibly simply be the central metaphor of the meditative, flowy video “Escape Artist” (2018/25). Per the curatorial textual content, it originates from yet one more earlier work, “UKI Virus Rising,” which is in flip a part of Cheang’s sci-fi alt-reality mission UKI (2023). In it, Reiko, a former intercourse employee dumped on a digital landfill, remakes herself with e-trash right into a contagious virus — a picture of viral mutability and generative energy, notably since Reiko finally rises to save lots of the planet. At Haus der Kunst, the picture of blood cells floating peacefully throughout a crimson background could not have the identical explosive vitality because the insurgent Reiko does within the movie, however it nonetheless left me pondering of the human physique itself as a potent, porous, and subsequently hackable system.

Shu Lea Cheang UKI Virus Rising part of Escape Artist 2025

Set up view of Shu Lea Cheang, “Escape Artist” (2018/25), video, CGI animation
Shu Lea Cheang Installation View2

Set up view of Shu Lea Cheang, “Home Delivery” (2025)
Shu Lea Cheang Installation View1

Set up view of Shu Lea Cheang, “Home Delivery” (2025)

Shu Lea Cheang: Kiss Kiss Kill Kill continues at Haus der Kunst (Prinzregentenstraße 1, Munich, Germany) by means of August 8. The exhibition was curated by Sarah Johanna Theurer with Laila Wu.

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