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Now in the final days of our residency we have met a German artist who is mid way through a 3 month residency in Chongqing, he is sharing a studio with a French artist who is coming to the end of a 2 month residency. The first European artists we’ve met since we’ve been here.

They have been sourcing materials from houses marked for demolition. On their numerous trips they have stumbled across people sleeping and people stripping copper from electrical cables. Their studio is now home to a large framed wedding photograph claimed from one of the houses.

We have been there too, at the start of our residency during a exploration of the city centre we stumbled across the same houses. We took some photographs from outside standing on the pavement, we wrote (briefly) about it in a previous post and uploaded 2 of the images. From outside we could see the contents of peoples’ lives exposed, upturned and left to mould, we had no desire to go any further, it just felt too intrusive to do so.

Nina Chua
December 4th


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Looking Again

On several occasions I have set out to find Nina’s work. On Wednesday I got up early, armed with my camera to seek out 2 structures that I had seen Nina making in the studio. I knew she had left them outside, close to our apartment, to collect rainwater. I spent a considerable amount of time wandering through the grounds of the apartment blocks in our area – but to no avail. I found lots of other things though: chickens, playgrounds, gardens, houses, bamboo, palm trees; all just metres from where I live, unknown to me until now.

Yesterday, while accompanying Nina on Xiao Q’s 4th walk of the day, we again visited the area surrounding our apartment. We discussed how the presence of a dog somehow legitimises loitering in an area or visiting it time and time again. Alerted by a little sideways nod from Nina, I could just make out the allusive structures in the darkness. I returned to the spot today in daylight, and not only found the items that Nina had made but also an interesting scene. Near where Nina’s work was positioned were the foundations of a house, with the kitchen and living areas clearly defined; traces of tiles and interior decoration still present. These foundations gave way suddenly to a huge drop and another never seen before view far across the city.

In the afternoon I set out for another encounter with Nina’s work. This involved revisiting the banks of the Yangtze for the first time since our first week in Chongqing. I knew Nina was going to be spending the afternoon at the site collecting sand. For once I arrived at the perfect time to see her hauling 14 bags of sand up the very steep banks of the river to the road. This activity was not so much performance (she acknowledged my presence and chatted to people who lived nearby) but more a committed gesture. She has decided to collect this much sand and bring it back to the studio and so she does. It is this practical decision that drives the activity, rather than a process of endurance or exercise in provoking a reaction from passers by. Having said that, it is still a focused and consistent series of actions, distinct from mearly collecting materials; the means by which she transports the materials is imperative.

Nina’s work occurs, whether people are there to witness it or not. I just happened to be aware something was happening and fortunate to have arrived in time to view it; I was not an invited audience member. I did feel clumsy crouched in the undergrowth with a camera, but didn’t feel like I was interrupting or hindering the process. From what Nina has told me, each time she has visited this site, something has happened. Whether it be an offer of help, a word of advice, witnessing the vegetable patches rapidly advancing down the river bank or seeing local people gather to shout at the coal lorries thundering past their homes. Her action is set amongst the everyday life surrounding it, not directly communicating with it, but existing alongside and within.

For me, returning to the site was very different from last time. The scene was less abject; partly because of its familiarity and also more bearable now my lungs have adjusted to the local air. My experience was less about the overall guttural impact of the place, although the dust and smog are still very present, and more now about the details site. The crops, the things people have hanging outside their homes, the fish pools on the roofs of houses, the sound of the train, the old man walking along the train track… This site still has great impact, but your reading of the scene alters with each visit.

Jessica Longmore
Friday 3rd December


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A knock on the studio door and Yan Yan’s voice telling me ‘I’ve brought a friend to meet you’… Another impromptu surprise!

Xiao Q! A huge longhaired dog and my companion for the remainder of the week. A really good surprise I have to thank Yan Yan for arranging.

Before leaving for Chongqing I met with artist Philip Davenport, he was artist in residence at 501 earlier in the year. Philip recalled taking Yan Yan’s dog, Xiao Q for long walks, Xiao Q disrupting art students sketching at their easels, causing mayhem chasing other dogs and the access a dog grants you to areas you might not otherwise venture. Philip’s instruction for me was to take Xiao Q for a walk then with a wry smile he mentioned Xiao Q’s size.

One of the first things I enquired when I arrived was about Xiao Q. It turned out that he was living with a different owner, Yan Yan unable to keep up with the demands of caring for such a large dog. At that moment I thought I wouldn’t get to meet him and gave up on the thought of fulfilling Philip’s instruction. But such is the way of the people here, it seems Xiao Q has several homes happy to share and that Yan Yan can bring him back as and when he likes.

I spent most of today walking Xiao Q which was as enjoyable for me as for him. With only 4 days to go, the exhibition is on my mind but as I have mentioned previously, I have made the decision to keep working right up to the last day and this was the opportunity to follow Philip’s instruction with the possibility in mind of discovering something new.

Link to read Philip’s experience with Xiao Q:

http://arthur-and-martha.blogspot.com/2009/11/day-…

Nina Chua
2nd December


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Today I had a two and a half hour studio day with Shen Hua. Shen Hua was the first artist that I have been able to discuss the work with at length and also the first to talk to me about their work. Shen Hua’s paintings focus on the Ban Ban and other migrant workers in Chongqing. He empathises with their stories, as he himself has made the journey from countryside to city; a journey of huge contrasts in China.

Ban Ban are the men and women, unique to Chongqing, who carry goods either end of a bamboo pole. Our first experience of the Ban Ban was when we arrived and one man carried Nina and my 23kg each suitcases – either end of a bamboo pole- up three flights of stairs to our apartment. On this occasion, Nina and I scurried after him, so we could catch him if he collapsed under the strain, but he barely broke a sweat.

We continually see people carrying large objects up and down the high street in Huang Jai Ping. Stacks of polystyrene, babies in baskets, net bags of pomellos (grapefruits the size of watermelons), clusters of water bottles and canisters of gas. Old and young, men and women. It is a basic, daily routine of many people’s lives.

It is rare to see a foreign face in Chongqing, but you do see people from all over China here. Chongqing is said to be the world’s fastest growing city; some even say, with a population of 32 million it is the world’s largest city; but there seem to be many contenders for this title. The rapid expansion of the city has not only attracted people from distant villages to come and work, but also swallowed up villages which were formally on the outskirts of Chongqing. This sudden explosion in size and population, combined with continual urban construction and demolition makes Chongqing feel quite disconcerting. I can’t get any sort of sense of the city as a whole, and as everything appears to be the same age you get no idea of the city’s past. On the surface it is a city without history. Chongqing is the former capital of China but it is very hard to find visual evidence of this and this lack of historical context adds to the feeling of disorientation.

Jessica Longmore
Wednesday 1st December


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A nice circularity has happened. Our exhibition will be held in the gallery at Ximalaya Bookshop. Ximalaya was my starting point, the first place I found by following an artist’s description in this case a map drawn by Sarah Sanders. As I approach the end of my residency it feels right that my work should culminate at Ximalaya Bookshop.

The time we’ve had to work in Chongqing has been short (less than a month), so it is both our intention to keep on working up to the date of the exhibition. Today Jessica was in Yao Bo’s studio. This is a lovely studio that Yao Bo keeps immaculately clean and tidy, she sometimes lives there and it carries a feeling of home about it. The space is filled with Yao Bo’s ceramics and paintings, some look robust and others more delicate, the placement of each work carefully considered. In the middle of the room is a large table laid out with ceramic objects that look like fragments of seashells. They are actually casts taken from deflated balloons and by the side of the table Yao Bo has constructed an ad-hoc looking structure (upturned furniture stacked together for height and bamboo poles reaching across) to enable her to cast the balloons. It will be interesting to see how Jessica responds to this space.

I placed two constructions I made earlier in the week, outside to collect rainwater and made a journey to the riverbank to collect sand.

The exhibition will open on the evening of Monday 6th of December so we have 6 days to go.

Nina Chua
30th November


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