2025.01.04 Saturday 15:00
Location
Macalline Center of Art, 706 Beiyi St, 798 Art Zone, No.2 Jiuxianqiao Lu, Chaoyang District, Beijing
Speaker:Ye Huirong
On the afternoon of January 4, MACA will host researcher Ye Huirong's lecture-performance, Storm Trilogy. Through semi-factual storytelling, the project examines the development of weather research in modern China, tracing the maturation of meteorology and its role in shaping attendant infrastructures of climatic, cultural, and cartographic feeling.
Mirroring the colonial, socialist, and reform-era shifts of twentieth-century China, Storm Trilogy portrays the lives of three adolescent women navigating borderlands and ecologically sensitive areas, each facing storms that symbolize personal, societal, and political upheavals.
Interweaving historical truth, fictional narrative, and Ye's autoethnographic perspective rooted in her upbringing at a weather station on China’s coast, Storm Trilogy traces a lineage of generational kinship and womanhood across time and space, and renarrates the silence in history and absence in archives.
Huirong Ye is a researcher and writer whose work spans Sinophone art, film and visual studies, environmental humanities, transpacific island and ocean studies, sensory history, epistemology, and activist media. She seeks to redefine the dynamic relationship between text and image, exploring new narrative possibilities at the intersections of historiography, ethnography, and representational media. Her research often transforms into lecture performances, where she disseminates unfinished and unauthorized knowledge through passionate amateurism; evolves into essay films—currently focusing on storms, lighthouses, and socialist women’s sky-watching groups; or takes the form of exhibitions, where she, as a curator, mediates the narratives and relationships between works by others. Ye graduated from the Harvard Graduate School of Design and has lived and worked extensively between Boston and Shanghai. She is now constantly on the move.