Eugenia Lim The Ambassador

ABOUT

Eugenia Lim is an Australian artist of Chinese–Singaporean descent who works across video, performance and installation. In her work, Lim transforms herself into invented fictional personas who traverse through time and cultures to explore how national identities and stereotypes cut, divide and bond our globalised world.

This 4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Art and Museums & Galleries of NSW (M&G NSW) initiated touring project presents Lim’s most recent body of work, The Ambassador seriesIn this three-part project, Lim takes on a Mao-like persona who sits halfway between truth and fantasy –  dressed in a gold lamé suit and matching bowl haircut. Throughout each of her works, the Ambassador takes on new roles in uncovering the Australian-Asian narrative – drilling down into racial politics, the social costs of manufacturing and the role of architecture in shaping society.

Visitors have commented:

“Wonderful revelation”

“Absurd and profound”

“What an incredible exhibition”

Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, SA

 


Eugenia Lim The Ambassador Catalogue cover

CATALOGUE

A 116 page colour catalogue has been produced to accompany the tour by 4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Art and designed by Mick Boston of D.A.M. It features an essay and series descriptions by exhibition curator and Director of 4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Art, Dr Mikala Tai, as well as an interview with the artist by writer and Enterprise Professor at the University of Melbourne Natalie King. Purchase a hardcopy catalogue through the 4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Art website.

 


ABOUT THE ARTWORKS

 

Part 1: Yellow Peril (2015)

Yellow Peril contemplates the fraught stories from the first wave of Chinese migrants seeking to make their fortunes in the Australian gold rush. The 17-minute featurette transports Lim’s Ambassador to the Sovereign Hill theme park, an open air museum that reimagines 1850’s Ballarat, Victoria. Mixing in with a cast of modern-day visitors and historical theme-park actors, Eugenia’s lone Ambassador silently wanders throughout the site from dawn to dusk. She partakes in gold mining, inspects machinery and eventually strikes gold and ‘wins big’. However, throughout the process, Lim’s Ambassador seems twice removed – silent, isolated and ambiguous – appearing as a literal and cultural relic from another time and place.

Exhibited alongside is the sculptural gold nugget featured in the video work and two photographs printed on gold emergency blankets – one picturing the artist’s hopeful parents shortly after their arrival in Australia in front of Ron Robertson-Swann’s public sculpture Vault (1980)or better known in Melbourne as ‘yellow peril’.

These poetic elements draw careful attention to the local and personal experiences for many first-generation Chinese migrants, including Lim’s own parents, and the social costs of seeking fortune in a faraway land.

 

> video: Yellow Peril (3 minute excerpt)

 

 

Part 2: The People’s Currency (2017)

When almost everything is now ‘Made in China’, how are we, as consumers, implicated in the poor labour conditions of the production line? – Eugenia Lim

Borrowing its name from the renminbi (China’s Currency), The People’s Currency turns the gallery into ‘Renminconn’, a closed-loop ‘special economic zone’. Within this zone Lim dressed as the Chairman Mao-like, gold-suited Ambassador, stands over her factory of counterfeit money-printing and ceramic imitation electronic consumer goods. As the Ambassador, Lim invites the public to enter into ‘short-term employment’ as shift workers on her factory floor, completing a menial yet meditative task. Based on her satisfaction with the completed product, she will remunerate the ‘employee’ with her counterfeit notes printed on site – The People’s Currency.

In Lim’s project, this collision of mass-production, menial work and counterfeit currency become strategies to evaluate the two-fold impacts of global capitalism – on those who seek their fortunes in the factories of China or ‘the workshop of the world’, and the global consumers of these ubiquitous and aspirational products.

 

> video: The People’s Currency (documentation from Asia TOPA)

 

 

Part 3: The Australian Ugliness (2018)

Lim’s latest project surveys the role of architecture in marking a society and shaping national identity. The work has been titled after the bestselling book by Robin Boyd, arguably one of Australia’s most prominent architects and Modernists. Boyd’s The Australian Ugliness denounces the conservative, kitsch and decorative tastes of post-war 1950s Australia, warning against parochialism and insularity. Lim will build upon these ideas, transporting them into 21st century Australia.

This multi-channel video work, will see the Ambassador lead a wide-ranging tour of iconic public and private spaces in Australian cities. The work will insert a female and Asian identity on screen and into the built environment of our cities – spaces still dominated by macho-white taste. Throughout her journey, The Ambassador will interrogate the tensions between globalism and localism, natural and the cultural and the importance of understanding Boyd’s featurism today in the Asian century.

 

> video: The Australian Ugliness (3 minute excerpt)

 


ABOUT THE ARTIST

Eugenia Lim’s (b. 1981 Melbourne, Australia) work has been exhibited internationally at venues including the Tate Modern, GOMA, ACMI, HUN Gallery NY, and FACT Liverpool. She has received a number of Australia Council for the Arts grants and residencies, including a residency at the Experimental Television Centre NY and exchange at the Rhode Island School of Design (RISD). Recent residencies include Bundanon Trust, 4A Beijing Studio and the Robin Boyd Foundation. Collaboration, artistic community and the intersection between art and society informs her practice: in addition to her solo work, she co-directed the inaugural Channels: the Australian Video Art Festival, is a board member at Next Wave, the founding editor of Assemble Papers and co-founder of interdisciplinary collective Tape Projects.

Eugenia Lim is represented by STATION.


ITINERARY

Anne & Gordon Samstag Museum of Art, SA 28 February – 6 April 2019
Nautilus Arts Centre – City of Port Lincoln, SA 19 April – 1 June 2019
Riddoch Art Gallery, SA 17 January – 23 February 2020
Bega Valley Regional Gallery, NSW
8 May – 21 June 2020
Goulburn Regional Art Gallery, NSW 10 July – 14 August 2020
Griffith Regional Art Gallery, NSW 12 September – 18 October 2020
Coffs Harbour Regional Gallery, NSW 20 November 2020 – 16 January 2021

 


READ MORE

Eugenia Lim on ethics, absurdity and subverting stereotypes – Art Guide Australia interview with Tiarney Miekus

Eugenia Lim takes global topics to the regions – ArtsHub article by Gina Fairley

Eugenia Lim: The Ambassador – Art Almanac review by Eugene Yiu Nam Cheung

Eugenia Lim : Artist Text – The National | New Australian Art by Joanna Bayndrian

Ugly Beautiful Australia – MCA Australia, first published by Assemble Papers

Your weekly online art list #3 | The Ambassador at Bega Valley Regional Gallery – Art Guide Australia by Tiarney Miekus

Eugenia Lim: Hidden Figures – Vault Magazine, Issue 28

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


EDUCATION RESOURCE

 


A 4A Centre for Contemporary Asian Art and Museums & Galleries of NSW touring exhibition. This project has been assisted by the Australian Government’s Visions of Australia program, and through the Australia Council for the Arts, its arts funding and advisory body.