London-based artist, Yu-Chen Wang presents a site-specific installation in respond to the Victoria Baths’ history and its current architectural space. The project is based on the fictional story of Yu-Chen’s new experiment of creating “A Last Drop” in order to re-fill the pool at Victoria Baths and ensure that the water will never dry up again.
The artist uses a story written by Bob Dickinson to contextualise the multi-layered visual narratives presented in a series of drawings, sculptures and a newly produced film work. This is in conjunction with her current residency at Chinese Arts Centre, as well as a 20-minute performance in collaboration with a Manchester-based theatre actress, filmmakers and artists which spans across both venues.
Limited edition hand-made publications are given out to the public whilst the performance is filmed by the members of MMU Media Lab. Cornerhouse will premiere the film to coincide Yu-Chen Wang’s artist book, published by CAC later this year.
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14 May 2011
10am-4pm
Installation and live performance throughout the day
with the main act starting at the Aeratone at 2pm
Victoria Baths
Hathersage Road, Chorlton-on-Medlock, Manchester, M13 0FE
www.futureeverything.org/art/yu-chen-wang-chinese-arts-centre-resident-artist-performs-at-handmade
Writer: Bob Dickinson
Film crew: Daniel Hutchings, Rose Coxon, Ali McElhoney, Khieng Ly
Photo: Kris Extance
Sound: Sid Volter
Costume: Valpuri Vihriala, Aliyah Hussain
Performer: Katherine Godfrey, The Cavendish Singers, Szu-Wen Lee, Marc Solloway, Pao Ju Lin, George Wewiora, Oliver Bliss, Carolina Herzberg, Naomi Sumner, Pat Brocklehurst, Paul Woodhouse and Shona Harrison.
16 May 2011 7pm
Chinese Arts Centre: Market Buildings, Thomas Street Manchester M4
Please join us at a special screening of the film: The Splash and A Last Drop
www.chinese-arts-centre.org
With thanks to Janine McGinnies from FutureEverything, Elizabeth Wewiora from Chinese Arts Centre, Gill Wright, Neil Bonner, Martin Connor, Alison Kershaw and Barry Johnstone from Victoria Baths, Jacqueline Butler from the MMU Media Lab and Andro Semeiko.
www.theshriekingviolets.blogspot.com/2011/05/yu-chen-wang-splash-and-last-drop.html
Yu-Chen Wang: The Splash and A Last Drop
Natalie Bradbury
When Yu-Chen Wang first walked into Victoria Baths she was overwhelmed by the space – its size, Edwardian grandeur and industrial-age history. Invited by Future Everything to produce a piece of work in the building, to coincide with the drawing to a close of a three month residency at the Chinese Arts Centre, she decided that, rather than try to fill or change the space she was working with (the former female pool, the smaller of two, now drained, pools that remain in the building), her work would focus on the way the audience experienced the building. She explains: “When I first went I was immediately in love with the space but I found myself very small. My own voice sounded very different. The space itself has already done a lot and there’s a lot going on in there so I’m getting people to experience the space differently rather than constructing a lot or displaying a big artwork.”
On the final day of FutureEverything, visitors to the Baths will encounter Yu-Chen’s work in different spaces around the female pool as part of a sound and performance piece entitled “The Splash and A Last Drop” which imagines the creation of a machine that produces a last drop of water in Victoria Baths then multiplies it so the water will never dry up again. The work will function as a “moving device”, playing with the transition between different parts of the building.
The story starts at the Chinese Arts Centre, where an actress playing Yu-Chen is filmed boarding a spaceship which transports her to Victoria Baths. Visitors to the Baths will catch-up with the story so far by viewing this video in the former female cloakroom that once served the female pool. A nearby room housing the aeratone – an early, yet still slightly futuristic looking, jacuzzi that, when it was installed at Victoria Baths in 1952, became the first such public facility in the country – will be transformed into an installation of Yu-Chen’s highly detailed drawings, which often focus on aspects of machines. When she saw the aeratone’s buttons and controls, Yu-Chen was struck by the feeling “it should be moving, going somewhere”. Yu-Chen’s interest in machines is closely connected to her approach to drawing: “Machines are very much about structure and structure is about creating something. Drawing for me is a concept – how bits fit and are connected to each other. It’s very much about movement. Machines have a performative element and quality and a human presence and spirit – I always imagine they will start moving and talking. And that’s how I would describe what drawing is – it’s not just about pencil and paper.” Likewise, The Splash and A Last Drop itself will consist of a number of “components”: “There are lots of bits and pieces put together. The viewer can look at it as a whole or as individual works.”
Yu-Chen has been exploring the history of Victoria Baths through its archive, which includes photos, hundreds of memories donated by former users and artefacts relating to its past. Actors playing uniformed ticket officers will regale visitors with stories and hand out publications drawing on industrial heritage, which will act as a programme. The work will culminate with the Cavendish Singers from Didsbury singing a song entitled Songs of the Machine in the female pool, a 1910 poem about machines that start talking to humans that was later set to music by one of its members. Yu-Chen explains: “The space is so big it needs a group. A group of people gives power.” The performance will become a short film that will be screened in Manchester city centre in the days following Future Everything.
The work is a collaboration with writer Bob Dickinson, who Yu-Chen met through her residency, and six MA Media Lab students from Manchester Metropolitan University. She says: “I like to work with people who aren’t just artists. The idea goes to writers, filmmakers, actors, costume makers – it organically develops and becomes a collective idea. It creates different readings – the text levels, the costumes, the actors, the live performance – it is a different way of constructing narrative.”
London-based artist, Yu-Chen Wang presents a site-specific installation in respond to the Victoria Baths’ history and its current architectural space. The project is based on the fictional story of Yu-Chen’s new experiment of creating “A Last Drop” in order to re-fill the pool at Victoria Baths and ensure that the water will never dry up again.
-
The artist uses a story written by Bob Dickinson to contextualise the multi-layered visual narratives presented in a series of drawings, sculptures and a newly produced film work. This is in conjunction with her current residency at Chinese Arts Centre, as well as a 20-minute performance in collaboration with a Manchester-based theatre actress, filmmakers and artists which spans across both venues.
Limited edition hand-made publications are given out to the public whilst the performance is filmed by the members of MMU Media Lab. Please check out the FutureEverything website www.futureeverything.org after the event to see the film.
14 May 2011
10am-4pm
Installation and live performance throughout the day
with the main act starting at the Aeratone at 2pm
Victoria Baths
Hathersage Road, Chorlton-on-Medlock, Manchester, M13 0FE
www.futureeverything.org/art/yu-chen-wang-chinese-arts-centre-resident-artist-performs-at-handmade
Writer: Bob Dickinson
Film crew: Daniel Hutchings, Rose Coxon, Ali McElhoney, Khieng Ly
Photo: Kris Extance
Sound: Sid Volter
Costume: Valpuri Vihriala, Aliyah Hussain
Performer: Katherine Godfrey, The Cavendish Singers, Szu-Wen Lee, Marc Solloway, Pao Ju Lin, George Wewiora, Oliver Bliss, Carolina Herzberg, Naomi Sumner, Pat Brocklehurst, Paul Woodhouse and Shona Harrison.
16 May 2011 7pm
Chinese Arts Centre: Market Buildings, Thomas Street Manchester M4
Please join us at a special screening of the film: The Splash and A Last Drop
www.chinese-arts-centre.org
With thanks to Janine McGinnies from FutureEverything, Elizabeth Wewiora from Chinese Arts Centre, Gill Wright, Neil Bonner, Martin Connor, Alison Kershaw and Barry Johnstone from Victoria Baths, Jacqueline Butler from the MMU Media Lab and Andro Semeiko.

Yu-Chen Wang is a Taiwanese born, British based artist whose practice primarily explores the notion of representation, distortion and transformation. She is curious about everyday objects and surroundings and how she can add individual elements and bring various components together to transform them into something extraordinary. During her residency here Yu-Chen chose to focus on an architectural approach to space, creating interventions in new drawings, installation and film work, linking directly to Manchester’s industrial past – its stories, architecture and machinery. Starting from an initial conversation with Adam Daber, Curator (Industry) at the Museum of Science of Industry, Yu-Chen was able to take stories and images from this visit and to focus on specific elements of Manchester’s industry rich history to develop into new visual works.
Alongside this specific line of investigation, Yu-Chen also delivered a number of public events in the form of Taiwanese Tea Parties, workshops, an artist studio swap with Rogue Artist Studios and artist Breakfast Clubs, all of which have acted as a means for her to engage with the public. By interacting with both the Manchester art scene and a general audience Yu-Chen hoped to explore and learn more about Manchester’s past and current culture.
The Open Studio work showcases a major collaborative project that crosses over from the residency space into a site-specific installation taking place at Victoria Baths this Saturday. The performance and film work, spanning across the Female Pool, Female Club Room and the Aeratone of the baths, is part of the FutureEverything Festival, running between 10-4pm with the main performance at 2pm.
The work that exists between the residency space and Victoria Baths reflects two lines of investigation. Yu-Chen’s exploration of Manchester’s industrial past is showcased alongside responses to the artist’s visit to Victoria Baths. From these elements, Yu-Chen devised a story, The Splash and A Last Drop, with Bob Dickinson (BBC). The story tells of the disappearance of water from the baths and a mystical journey the artist and her machine (a spaceship in this instance) go through to discover its whereabouts. Evidence of the story appears physically within the Open Studio, such as the bench where the audience are invited to sit and wait their turn to ascend the ladder and enter the spaceship. In the performance and installation at Victoria Baths, the film work shows an all too familiar set, the residency space and its ladder acting as the portal between the studio and the ladders in the Aeratone. Yu-Chen has been collaborating with members of MMU media lab, The Cavendish Singers, local actress Katherine Godfrey, designers Aliyah Hussain and Valpuri Virihala amongst many other performers and volunteers. Our thanks go to all those involved in realising this ambitious project, with special thanks to Lu Di for all his hard work throughout.
Yu-Chen’s work is a clever response to her environment, both Chinese Arts Centre’s residency space and Victoria Baths; bringing small details to the audience’s attention. Working with existing architecture, found objects and changing light in the space, alongside her preoccupation with industrial machinery and its history, her work celebrates these environments with a playful installation, performance and film work not to be missed. For more information about all Yu-Chen’s projects during her residency visit her blog at
www.yuchenwang.com/blog
Breathe Residency Artist Yu-Chen Wang will be showcasing the work she has been developing throughout her 3 months at Chinese Arts Centre between 11-14 May, with a special evening on 12 May 5.30-7.30pm.
Yu-Chen has been looking into Manchester’s industrial past; the history, machinery and stories of this period, whilst responding directly to her residency space and the architecture of sites she visited locally.
To coincide with her Open Studio, Yu-Chen will be presenting a site-specific installation at Victoria Baths as part of FutureEverything Festival on 14 May. There will be elements of drawing, performance and film work available to see between 10-4pm with the main performance starting at 2pm (20mins) in between the Aeratone, Female Club Room and Female Pool of this beautiful listed building.
The performance directly links the works on display in the Open Studio space to the Baths, and Yu-Chen will be further working with Manchester-based writer, filmmakers and artists to realise the project.
With thanks to everyone from CAC and local artist, Lu Di, for all his support in the show’s installation.
We went to the legendary Schwitters’ Merzbarn in Cylinder Estate, just outside the village of Elterwater in the Lake District. Ian and Celia from the Littoral Arts Trust have kindly arranged the visit and letting us to stay at the Langdale Centre which is about 300 yards away from the Merzbarn. Luckily the weather was really sunny and warm, and we had lunch with Ian and Celia just outside of the gallery space at Cylinders. I loved that through our conversation, the history of Merzbarn, Schwitters’ ideas, Merzman project, our practice and even the most mundane topics all kept appearing in a very natural way. In this inspiring environment, we not only had a very relaxing time but also had a chance to rethink our work, life and to talk about our dreams.
www.merzbarn.net
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