Arts + Literature Laboratory presents Exuviae, an exhibition by Helen Lee, from Tuesday, January 9, 2024 through Thursday, March 7, 2024.
A reception for new exhibitions, including artist talks, will be held Thursday, January 18 from 6:00pm to 8:00pm.
Exhibition statement:
“Exuviae” refers to a sloughed-off skin, such as that of snakes, cicadas, and other exoskeleton creatures. The Latin roots of this word refer simply to “things stripped from a body.” Often transparent, exuviae commonly retain the exact appearance of the animal from which it was shed. This exhibition explores ancestry over the course of migration, and what can and cannot be molted from human experience—particularly diasporic experience. Three works—Brood, Amulet, and Smoulder—triangulate the inheritances of loss and material and cultural narratives from the perspective of a second-generation Chinese-American artist. These works consider: the weight of a generational bloodline; the diffusion of a phonetic alphabet; and reverberations of the American gaze on Asian identity that grew from the oldest branch of the Chinese diaspora in America.