LIMINALITY
Andras Nagy-Sandor, Ferdinand Dölberg, Alexandra Errington, Alice Macdonald, Joana Galego, Kay Gasei
15 June 2024 - 15 September 2024
Beijing, China
ABOUT
EY Projects is pleased to present its inaugural exhibition "Liminality." For this occasion, the works of 6 emerging artists worldwide are gathered here to compose a liminal narrative and to construct a space of liminality.
Liminality is the term first coined by French folklorist van Gennep to denominate the second of three stages in what he advocated as "a rite of passage". This second stage - the liminal stage - entails a transition from one status to another, both on an individual level, from childhood to maturity, sickness to health, or on a sociocultural scale, like peace to war, scarcity to plenty, and so on. Liminality is a quality of being in between two places or stages, on the verge of transitioning to something new. Anthropologically, liminality may be accompanied by a sense of disorientation and even frustration as the participants have abandoned their previous way of structuring their identity, time, or community but have not yet entered the new way. Nonetheless, it is during the liminal periods that the existing orders and hierarchies may be reversed or dissolved. Liminality hereby creates a malleable and fluid situation that welcomes the potential for the establishment of new institutions and customs.
Both people and places are constantly in the stage of liminality. The process of individuation, for instance, can be seen as taking place in a liminal condition. As psychologist Carl Jung advocates, “individuation begins with a withdrawal from normal modes of socialisation, epitomised by the breakdown of the persona,” - “a movement through liminal space and time, from disorientation to integration.” Spatially, any architectural structure that locates between one destination and the next characterises liminality, hallways, airports, streets.
Through this exhibition, EY Projects brings together the notion of liminality on both the individual and the spatial realms, using contemporary art as a shared language to explore the impact of embracing the in-betweenness. On the level of the people, drawing from theoretical reflections or personal experience, each artist presents a narrative of his/her own regarding transformation and transition, making the otherwise intangible ideas tangible through an artistic expression. On the level of the space, the architecture transcends its original identity and transforms into an artistic destination and a container of lived ideas and stories.
ARTISTS
Andras Nagy-Sandor
Ferdinand Dölberg
Alexandra Errington
Alice Macdonald
Joana Galego
Kay Gasei
LOCATION
Building 1, BAF Park, Chaoyang District
Beijing, China
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