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Excessive

Tao Hui

AIKE-DELLARCO, Shanghai

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Première
Title
Excessive
Gallery
AIKE-DELLARCO, Shanghai
Year
2015
Duration
19 min 32 s
Format & Technical

Single channel installation, Loop, HD video, black and white, sound
Edition of 5 + 2 AP

  • Music
  • Voice
  • Produced By
  • Photography
  • Cast
  • Special Thanks
  • Supported by

In the multi-channel video installation Excessive, Tao Hui draws viewers in with a narrative of conflict. A young girl’s extra finger causes enormous grief in her family, leading her to cut it off with a kitchen knife and burn it to ashes. Here, Tao Hui eliminates the backdrop of each scene, leaving only the characters with a few props with a male’s narration throughout the video. This technique brings emphasis to the actors within the piece. In the exhibition space, Tao Hui leaves a decorative box housing the ashes of the incinerated finger with a screen at the back projecting the act of the burning. These physical annotations allow the artworks to transgress the virtual into the real.

Stills

Still
Still
Still

Tao Hui

Artist, Speaker

1987, Yunyang, China

Tao Hui

Tao Hui currently lives and works in Beijing. Tao graduated from Sichuan Fine Arts Institute, Chongqing, China in 2010, majored in BFA oil painting. Tao Hui creates immersive video-installations that bend the boundaries of fiction and reality to address cultural and identity related issues. His works are visceral and provocative, yet enlightening and always imbued with a strong emotional power and a sense of displacement, inviting the viewers to confront themselves with their own cultural history, ways of living and social identities. In 2015, Tao Hui was awarded The Grand Prize at the 19th Contemporary Art Festival Sesc_ Videobrasil: Southern Panoramas, São Paulo, and the Art Sanya & Huayu Youth Award, Sanya, China. His work is represented in the collections of: Kadist Foundation, San Francisco; Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris; K11 Foundation, Hong Kong; M+ Museum, Hong Kong; New Century Art Foundation, Beijing; Sunpride Foundation, Hong Kong, The National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art – MMCA, Seoul, and the Ullens Center for Contemporary Art–UCCA, Beijing.

Last update: October 8th, 2019.