Wenda Gu United Nations
About the Exhibition
Date
Sep 8 – Jan 6, 2005Location
Remis Sculpture Court
Wenda Gu fuses traditional Chinese ink painting, seals, and furniture with the materials and notions of a new millennium in his United Nations series of monuments, which he began in 1993 and has installed in fifteen countries. Gu’s two site-specific, 22-foot-high sculptures at Tufts are totems made from the human hair of various races, formed into blocks and supporting the pseudo-calligraphic characters of an invented language. These nonsensical “un-words” (the oral expression of Mandarin Chinese words into English that are then transliterated back into Chinese) expose the misunderstanding that is rife in our attempts at translating languages and cultures. However, Gu’s use of biological material (human hair) from an assortment of genders and ethnicities reveals an optimism about the possibilities of globalization and genetic development. The blending of races and cultures creates a utopian scenario which transcends the present narrow-mindedness of society towards the “other.