Open menu Close menu
Artists List

Wenxin ZhangCN

Wenxin Zhang<sup>CN</sup>
Wenxin ZhangCN

Wenxin Zhang is a Chinese artist currently living in Hangzhou, China. She utilizes video, CG and photography in her installations while combining writing and music in her process-oriented perceptual experience. Zhang’s artistic process starts from observations of everyday experience as well as technical images, which grow into the continuous mapping on time and transcendence. She sees herself as a land surveyor, one who conceives maps as guides through the physical and spiritual worlds. She has received her MFA degree at California College of the Arts in 2013. She has completed many artist residencies, including at the Muffatwerk in Munich, Germany. She has exhibited her artworks throughout China and North America, including at InterAccess (Toronto), the Goethe-Institut (Beijing), The Clemente (New York) and the Guangdong Museum (Guangzhou). Wenxin Zhang has also worked on curatorial projects in San Francisco, Beijing and Shanghai.

Wenxin Zhang CNInorganic Mysteries

Inorganic Mysteries is a video featuring algorithmic 3D modelling and physics-based rendering to portray a moving scroll of mysterious rituals that belong to inorganic beings. The experience starts from within a cyber city (a metaphor of the binary matrix) through an apparatus resembling an iris. An unenlightened inorganic being communicates with an inorganic medium who has cracked the problem of consciousness. In a progressively fractalizing visual trip, the inorganic being obtains the phenomenal experience, right before everything vanishes on screen. Inspired by numerous religious rituals, myths and legends, Inorganic Mysteries explores the issues of consciousness from various fields, including the research on neural networks in cognitive neuroscience and artificial intelligence.

Who

Hangzhou-based media artist Wenxin Zhang, paving digital highways that cross different states of consciousness.

Latest

This year, she has worked on an interactive installation titled Slimy blues from Speckled Shores, a musical instrument that responds to human touch.

More

Zhang has collaborated with MUTEK participant Xuan Ye on filing the Klein bottle, an installation that navigates the touristic impulse of contemporary cyber-capitalist culture.

Links
Website