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Image At Surface

April 16, 2019 John Matney
Zhengyang-Huang-portfoilio-2018-(2)-1.jpg

Zhengyang Huang's Image At Surface Installation, April 13-20.

Opening Reception, Saturday, April 13, 2-4pm 

Walk-in hours April 18-20, 11am-5pm or call for appointment April 16 and 17

Materiality is not limited to touchable objects. The image a video/film creates is also a moving material, like fluttering fabric. When we see a material, the visual information triggers our tactile cognition and a sense of materiality so that we recognize how this material will feel if we touch it. This phenomenon happens with digital images as well. Giuliana Bruno, who studies surfaces in different media, says that an image is a material that manifests itself on the surface of media. For me, a video has virtual materiality, but a video does not manifest its materiality in the same way as a physical object. For instance, in the videos I made for Majiang Project, the filmic settings lack a sense of space and seem flattened. The floral patterned and saturated red and green colors in the background makes the video’s image bright. The cut between scenes is smoothly connected with body gestures. The red seamlessly transitions into the green as if two pieces of fabric were stitched together. The whole video triggers a sense of materiality, similar to that triggered by fabric. It is not touchable like physical fabric, yet as virtual materiality, it influences us on a sensory level.

However, I do not intend to just make videos. I am more interested in connecting this virtual materiality with the physical materiality in the physical space we approach. The whole work is to be a continuum of surfaces on which the materiality manifests itself. This continuum is formed as the digital surface and the physical surface are stitched together. In one of my video installations, a video shot with a peephole lens is projected onto a sink full of black-dyed water. The black-dyed water is so still and reflective that it almost becomes a solid, while the projected light layers a soft, moving and absorbing image on the dark solid surface. In the video, the peephole lens is constantly being touched, blocked, wiped, blurred, stained, and cleaned, as if the membrane of water is touched from beneath. What is being touched is both the surface of the lens in the video and the surface of the physical water, as the two share one connected surface. The video’s virtual materiality not only can be connected with a physical materiality but also can connect the physical space we move through. In another installation, four sets of objects and projected videos are set up in four different rooms, where the viewer walks to each room to see the whole work. As the videos are synced up with each other, what’s been seen in the video in one room continues in the next room. From the first to the fourth room the four different videos connect different space. In these and many other ways, we perceive and sense the virtual materiality physically.

Zhengyang Huang, 2019


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PAST EXHIBITIONS

Past
Evolving Perspectives: A W&M Senior Art Capstone Exhibition
about 3 months ago
Portals: Interior Worlds and Italian Landscapes Paintings by Teddy Johnson
about 6 months ago
THE PORTRAIT: HISTORIES, MYTHS, AND ALLEGORIES
about 9 months ago
THE LANDSCAPE AT CURRENT MIDTOWN
about 11 months ago
GRAYSON CHANDLER: PLANTING TRACES
about a year ago
REBECCA SHKEYROV’S KEPT UNDER HER WING AT CURRENT MIDTOWN
about a year ago
OLGA TOBRELUTS AND IVAN PLUSCH AT CURRENT MIDTOWN
about a year ago
THE WILLIAM & MARY STUDIO ART SENIOR CAPSTONE EXHIBITION
about a year ago
JOHN R.G. ROTH: MODELED EXPERIENCE
about a year ago
Synesthesia at SATÉ, A New American Experience
about a year ago
Christi Harris: Lachrymose
about a year ago
Leigh Anne Chambers: Shape Shifters and Spirit Guides
about a year ago
REBECCA SHKEYROV: KEPT UNDER HER WING
about a year ago
Nudes: A Contemporary View
about 2 years ago
Installation/Works on Paper 2023
about 2 years ago
THE WILLIAM & MARY SENIOR STUDIO ART MAJORS’ CAPSTONE EXHIBITION
about 2 years ago
A Glimpse into the Future of the Matney Gallery
about 2 years ago
BODILY RHETORIC
about 2 years ago
Three Excellences of Culture: Painting, Poetry and Music, the Work of Art Rosenbaum and Friends
about 2 years ago
Kristin Skees and Ryan Lytle: By a Thread
about 2 years ago

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