In a scenographed group of new sculptures and an immersive Virtual Reality journey we are taken on a real-time archeological dig that, like a sci-fi sub-genre, appears both ancient and futuristic. Instead of exploring historical civilizations Lam summons apparitions from her family’s legacy in the city. But Lam’s work is not limited to the biographical. Using fiction as a tool and particular interior aesthetics of these restaurants as a formal language, Lam draws attention to the cultural history of these spaces and how the idea of a place constructs notions of cultural identity and belonging.
In the first space Lam reifies fragments from now-defunct restaurants’ interiors by extracting data from 3D scans. Chairs, a table, a stove, all take form as ruins, like the disintegrating furniture of a ship wreck seen through a watery mirage. Digitally stripped down to their bare shell-like surfaces, the environments are rendered as slivers of space and time.
A neon ghost illuminates the following room in cherry-red. The figure is not a threatening spectre but an ancestor – a conduit for previous generations, stitched together from the fragments of people accidentally captured in the 3D scans of the real world restaurants. It sits sentry and oversees the passage through to a staged dining room. As in séance, visitors seat themselves at a round table where they are transported via VR headsets into another spatial reality. A story narrated, perhaps by the ghost, accompanies the viewer through architectural spaces that are rendered as skins, at once both familiar and alien. Rooms are suspended in a void and dislocated from the infrastructure of their physical surroundings.
Within these disembodied establishments, which we individually populate in our VR spaces, Lam reveals hidden histories and futures. The exhibition constitutes an expanded anthropological enquiry that explores the fluidity of language, identity and cultural histories.
Elements within this exhibition were produced with the generous support of Christel Engelbert, Chairwoman of the Maria Bonnier Dahlin Foundation, and were commissioned and presented first at Performa 19, New York.
Lap-See Lam was born 1990 in Stockholm. She has a major upcoming solo exhibition at Bonniers Konsthall opening 25th January 2022. Her work is currently exhibited at in (Un)homed at Uppsala Konstmuseum and in a focussed presentation in the collection at Moderna Museet, Stockholm. Solo exhibitions include Skellefteå Konsthall, Skellefteå (2019); Moderna Museet Malmö (2018–2019); and Bonniers Konsthall, Stockholm (2018). She has taken part in group exhibitions at venues including Performa 19 in New York (2019); Metamorphosis – Art in Europe Now, currently nominated for the Global Fine Art Award, at Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain, Paris (2019); Luleå Biennial (2018); Kópavogur Art Museum, Kópavogur (2018); Kendra Jayne Patrick, New York City (2018); and Kunsthal Charlottenborg, Copenhagen (2017). Lam is a recipient of the Maria Bonnier Dahlin Foundation Grant (2017).
In the current circumstances we prioritize safety:
Private views are available Tuesday – Friday between 11.00 – 12.00 and 17.00 – 18.00 for the duration of the exhibition.
CLICK HERE TO BOOK A PRIVATE VIEW.
During regular opening hours (Tuesday to Friday 12.00 – 17.00, Saturday 12.00 – 16.00) tickets do not need to be booked.
Visitors are restricted to three people at any one time.
Areas of public contact are disinfected regularly.
You can experience a low resolution version of the VR artwork at home with a headset for your smartphone HERE. Headphones are recommended. To view the VR artwork at home you can order an inexpensive flatpack headset for your smartphone online or MAKE YOUR OWN.
Gallery name: Galerie Nordenshake
Address: Hudiksvallsgatan 8, Stockholm
Opening hours: Tue-Fri 11:00 - 18:00
Open: 14.05.2020 - 18.06.2020