Installation view of 《Spirals, Loops, Mutants》 © K11

The exhibition 《Spirals, Loops, Mutants》 brings together works by Li Ming, OK Seungcheol, Amba Sayal-Bennett and Zhu Changquan to imagine visual and conceptual mutations prompted by processes of repetition.

In 『Recursivity and Contingency』 (2019), philosopher Yuk Hui describes ‘recursivity’ as that which characterizes contemporary human-machine relations. Unlike mechanical repetitions of the past, this downward spiral motion repeats by absorbing contingency. In responding to unexpected, uncalculated events, the technology/machine enriches its system and grows like an organism. In computer programming, ‘recursion’ connotes a movement, which returns to itself in order to determine itself. Seen in this way, the mode of looping not only refers to the iterative processes of transformation, but also engages with the issue of self-definition.

Installation view of 《Spirals, Loops, Mutants》 © K11

Questioning what it means to repeat, whether in terms of methodology, subject matter, or medium, each artist reflects on the mode and the practice of art making. While Li Ming performs the processes of infinite looping in the form of a game he devised with his collaborator Zhu Changquan, OK Seungcheol’s anonymous, unnamed figures generated from an ever-changing combination of images culled from films, drama, animation, and online memes recur in his paintings and sculptures.

Through the doubling of forms and performative dynamics of (non)human assemblages, Amba Sayal-Bennett’s intricate drawings and sculptures consider how industrial and machinic repetition can lead to permutations. The various examples of human-material engagement and feedback enacted by each artist offer insight into their distinctive modes of interaction with their respective surroundings, whether virtual or real. More broadly, the works invite the viewers to reflect on the power of recurrence as a concept and a force, which embraces chances, modifications, and mutations.    

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