The Suitcase Is A Little Bit Rotten
Art

“Taking a speculative turn while considering the continuity of family narratives, Sim grafts the image of her young child and her disappeared grandfather into these found magic lantern slide images. While they could never meet in real life, the lineage and connection between Sim’s child and grandfather is enacted in this highly constructed–if not already…

Read More
“Requiem” at the Venice Biennale

My video “Requiem” is showing in the “Disobedience Archive” group exhibition, part of the main show at the 60th Venice Biennale (20 April – 24 Nov 2024). Curated by Marco Scotini, assistant curator Arnold Braho. Requiem, 2017 from “One Day We’ll Understand”, 2015-on-going Single-channel video and sound installation, 16:9, sound, colour Duration: 06:08 mins Requiem…

Read More
“One Day We’ll Understand” theatre performance – “world premiere” 30 August 2024
Art, Featured

Thrilled to announce the world premiere season of “One Day We’ll Understand” 《有那么一天》, a new multimedia performance I’ve been making from my long project on the anti-colonial war in Malaya. This production is a commission by the Esplanade – Theatres on the Bay, for Esplanade Presents: The Studios, and will be presented at Singtel Waterfront…

Read More
“The Mountain That Hid”, solo exhibition at Datsuijo, Tokyo

I’m grateful to curator Matthew Lawson Garrett and the team at Datsuijo independent art space for mounting this solo exhibition of my work in Tokyo, transforming my first artist book into a physical installation (and with translation into Japanese)! The book, “She Never Rode That Trishaw Again” (https://chiyinsim.com/she-never-rode-that-trishaw-again/), is the first of possibly four I’m…

Read More
The Suitcase Is A Little Bit Rotten on view at Camera Austria, Graz

My series of glass works The Suitcase Is A Little Bit Rotten and two-channel film The Mountain That Hid are in a group exhibition “Double Exposure” at Camera Austria in Graz. Curatorial text by Anna Voswinckel: The examination of the complex, transnational political entanglements of colonialism and its traumatic effects on (family) biographies forms the starting…

Read More
“The Suitcase Is A Little Bit Rotten”, shown at the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program studio exhibition, New York

I first became interested in Magic Lantern slides in learning through @gabbymoser’s scholarship about how they were a colonial pedagogical tool — specifically, they were used in a series of eight lectures cast as geography lessons to teach pupils around the British empire about its colonies. I became interested in what was inscribed in those…

Read More
Shifting Sands at Gropius Bau Berlin

An installation of photographic prints and a  newly-created VR piece, ‘The Garden Of No Return”, from my “Shifting Sands” project is on view at the Gropius Bau Berlin till August 2023. Indigo Waves and Other Stories Re-Navigating the Afrasian Sea and Notions of Diaspora 6 April to 13 August 2023 Taking the stories and histories…

Read More
“One Day We’ll Understand”: “Interventions” – solo show in Arles opens

A solo exhibition of my new work “Interventions”, part of my broader “One Day We’ll Understand” project, opened 4 July 2021 at the Les Rencontres d’Arles. Curated by Sam I-shan. The exhibition is installed in the Abbaye de Montmajour, a Benedictine monastery from the 10th century. https://www.rencontres-arles.com/en/expositions/view/1032/sim-chi-yin A review essay on the show, by British…

Read More
Solo show at Les Rencontres d’Arles
Art, Featured, News

I’ve been working on “Interventions”, a new solo show to debut at Les Rencontres de la photographie, Arles in July.  This is a new chapter of my ongoing work on the anti-colonial war in Malaya, focused on my reinterpretations of the colonial representation of this war and its participants. Excited to debut it at Arles,…

Read More
“One Day We’ll Understand”

“One Day We’ll Understand” 2015 – on-going Remnants Photographic installation, variable dimensions Requiem Two-channel video and sound installation, 16:9, sound, colour Duration: 12:34 mins Sim Chi Yin’s Remnants and Requiem take us on a cinematic journey through traces of hidden histories. The ethereal landscapes she conjures are an unspoken archive of an undeclared war. Evocative…

Read More
“Most People Were Silent”

Fallout (China-North Korea border, United States, 2017) In this exhibition commission for the Nobel Peace Prize 2017 — won by the International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN) — I created a series of diptychs pairing nuclear-related landscapes from the North Korea-China border and the United States. My intention was to get the viewer to…

Read More
“The Rat Tribe”

Every morning, a metamorphosis takes place below the ground of China’s capital. In a world without sun or fresh air, people roll out of bed in windowless rooms, empty bedpans into communal toilets, pay 50 cents for a five-minute shower, ascend concrete stairways to the outside world and transform themselves from residents of the city’s…

Read More
Tin Men

Thousands of Indonesians armed with plastic scoops, pick axes and jerry cans work to find tin each day on Bangka Island – just off the eastern coast of Sumatra — extracting the tin that becomes the solder that binds components in the world’s tablet computers, smartphones, and other electronics.

Read More