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Landscapes of Futures Past

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The unspoilt rural landscape of Jiading and its subtle relationship with the architecture of Tadao Ando's new Jiayuanhai Museum, are active participants in this exhibition. 

Artists

Bringing together artists from Australia, China, Denmark, Germany, ltaly, Japan, Poland, Russia, Singapore, and the U.K., the exhibition unfolds as a visual journey through the terrains and multiverses of time and space.

Inna ARTEMOVA

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Inna was born 1972 in Moscow, USSR. Lives and works in Berlin, Germany.

Stefano CAGOL

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Stefano was born 1969 in Trento, Italy. Lives and works in Trento, Italy.

CAO Yu

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CAO Yu was born 1988 in Liaoning Province, China. Lives and works in Beijing, China.

Exhibition Photos

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Utopia: Velocity Expanded

Inna ARTEMOVA, 2025
Acrylic marker, oil on canvas

300 x 1030 cm

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Escape off the Edge of the Human World

CAO Yu, 2021

Short film, colour/sound, edition of 6 + 2 AP

4:06

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The end of day and the beginning

of the world

Shingo YOSHIDA, 2015
4K ProRes 422 HQ, colour, sound

22:00

Landscapes of Futures Past

Curators: David Elliott & Rachel Rits-Volloch

Artist:

Inna ARTEMOVA, Stefano CAGOL, CAO Yu, CHEN Qiulin, Margret EICHER, FENG Bingyi, LIAO Wenfeng, LONG Pan, Kate McMILLAN, Danie MELLOR, MIAO Xiaochun, Kirsten PALZ, QIU Anxiong, Nina E. SCHÖNEFELD, Shingo YOSHIDA, Robert ZHAO RENHUI, ZHOU Xiaohu

Jul 17 - Sep 21, 2025

Landscapes of Futures Past is an exhibition of contemporary video art, digital animation, installation, and traditional artistic media such as tapestry and painting, reframed through the lens of our digitized era. Bringing together artists from Australia, China, Denmark, Germany, ltaly, Japan, Poland, Russia, Singapore, and the U.K., the exhibition unfolds as a visual journey through the terrains and multiverses of time and space.

A landscape is a terrain, or a view of it, onto which we project our aesthetic, emotional, spiritual, and physical needs. What we perceive in the land is not only what is physically there, but also what we bring to it: a sense of history and a longing for future, as well as a desire for beauty, a feeling of identity and belonging, or a fear of the unknown, a drive for survival, a hunger for control.

The works shown here are vessels for stories that unfold across time, revealing how landscapes are not static scenes, but living archives of human presence, absence, imagination and desire. The paradox of "futures past" written into the exhibition's title evokes spaces where both timelines collide, where utopias are imagined and erased, where memories and myth become embedded in the ground beneath our feet.

Whether on a scientific or a metaphysical level, the understanding of time and space is most often a dichotomy between the circular and linear — between traditional and quantum cosmologies that view time as cyclical or fluid, and other frameworks that measure it as linear and progressive. This tension underpins the temporal dislocations in Landscapes of Futures Past, where imagined futures and ancestral pasts converge, collapse, and reconfigure the landscapes that we inhabit and that others will inherit.

The unspoilt rural landscape of jiading and its subtle relationship with the architecture of Tadao Ando's new jiayuanhai Museum, are active participants in this exhibition. The interplay of circular and linear elements in the museum's design mirrors the exhibition's meditation on time and space — where past and future fold into the present. More than a container for art, the museum itself acts as a perceptual frame, not only for the artworks but also for the landscape beyond, which its windows — and the exhibition — invite us to see anew.

lmagining the world's pasts, presents, and futures, the works in this exhibition offer layered narratives about what it means to be alive in times of transformation. As global populations expand and economies accelerate, the landscapes we inhabit grow increasingly fragile — physically, culturally, and ecologically. Through their poetic and critical engagement in the present, the artworks navigate the recursive cycles of possible futures alongside the fractured, often linear timelines, of the past to reveal how memory and foresight intersect.

Some works reach back into ancestral geographies, where the earth resounds with echoes of identity, ritual, and resilience. Others confront ruptures — colonial scars, forced migrations and environmental erasures — that fracture our connection with the landscape and cast shadows on our future and past. Through intimate storytelling, speculative fictions, and poetic observations, these works invite viewers to gaze into the gaps between personal and collective memory to examine the landscapes we still carry within us, as well as those we have left behind.

In the spaces between what has been, what was hoped for, what remains, and what is still to come, artists sow the seeds of forgotten futures and remembered pasts in the hope that new narratives will take root.

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Open-Air Cinema Programme in partnership with CIFRA Platform

 

Curator: Li Zhenhua

 

Cinema has always been a way of travelling without moving, of gathering together with friends and strangers to embark on shared journeys, to discover distant landscapes or to revisit familiar terrains through new cinematic eyes. Cinema is uniquely capable of folding time and space, collapsing memory and imagination into a single frame.

In parallel with the artworks from China and around the world presented in this exhibition, film curator Li Zhenhua has assembled a cinematic cartography that traces landscapes of futures past—visions shaped by history, displacement, aspiration, and change. This Open-Air Cinema Programme, invites audiences to journey through time and place, across decades and through the diverse geographies of China, revealing how different landscapes remember, transform, and look to the future.

The Landscapes of Futures Past Open-Air Cinema, presented in partnership with the CIFRA Platform, comes to life every Saturday throughout the exhibition—an invitation to reflect, gather, and imagine together under the open sky, set against the evocative backdrop of Jiading’s grape vineyards and rice fields.

⸺ Rachel Rits-Volloch

About CIFRA

https://cifra.com/

Founded in the early 2020s, CIFRA is a global digital platform and community with a mission to transform how people experience digital art. Today it hosts over 1,000 artworks across 50+ genres, connecting hundreds of artists from Brazil to China, from Seoul to Venice. More than a streaming site, CIFRA is a living archive — a space where digital art gains permanence, visibility, and deeper meaning within an international community. Artists on CIFRA don’t just share content — they secure and present their vision to a global audience. Through curated programs and collaborations with figures like Lev Manovich, Dominique Moulon, and Rebecca Pedrazzi, CIFRA brings diverse voices to the forefront of contemporary discourse, challenging conventions and expanding the field. With initiatives like CIFRA TV, studio visits, and offline meetups, the platform fosters real-world connections and storytelling. Its mission is to open portals to emerging genres — from AI art to sound works, dance film to food-based practices — making space for new mythologies, digital rituals, and unexpected perspectives. Free to access and explore, CIFRA offers both open discovery and a membership model that supports artists directly through royalties, exclusive content, and merch. At its heart, CIFRA is a bold, boundary-crossing community where digital art finds its home — and keeps evolving.

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Curator: David Elliott

David Elliott is a British curator and writer focused on modern and contemporary art. He has led major institutions such as the Museum of Modern Art Oxford, Tokyo’s Mori Art Museum, and Istanbul Modern. He has taught at Humboldt University in Berlin and the Chinese University of Hong Kong. Elliott has also directed several international biennales, including those in Sydney, Kyiv, Moscow, and Belgrade. From 2017 to 2019, he was Vice Director and Senior Curator at the Redtory Museum of Contemporary Art in Guangzhou.

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Curator: Rachel Rits-Volloch 

Dr. Rachel Rits-Volloch is the Founding Director of MOMENTUM, a Berlin-based platform for time-based art. Since 2010, MOMENTUM has organized over 350 projects with more than 700 artists worldwide, focusing on the impact of digitization on culture. Through exhibitions, performances, public programs and the MOMENTUM Collection, it connects global art communities. Rachel holds degrees from Harvard and the University of Cambridge, including a PhD in Film Studies.

CHEN Qiulin

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CHEN Qiulin was born 1975 in Yi Chang, Hubei Province, China. Lives and works in Chengdu, China.

Margret EICHER

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Margret was born 1955 in Viersen, Germany. Lives and works in Berlin, Germany.

FENG Bingyi

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FENG Bingyi was born 1991 in Ningbo, Zhejiang Province, China. Lives and works in Shanghai, China.

LIAO Wenfeng

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LIAO Wenfeng was born 1984 in Jiangxi Province, China. Lives and works in Berlin, Germany.

LONG Pan

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LONG Pan was born 1991 in Yichun, China. Lives and works in Jiangxi, China.

Kate McMILLAN

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Kate was born 1974 in Hampshire, UK. 1982-2012 Perth, Australia. Lives and works in London, UK.

Danie MELLOR

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Danie was born 1971 in Mackay, Queensland, Australia. Lives and works in the Southern Highlands, New South Wales, Australia.

MIAO Xiaochun

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MIAO Xiaochun was born 1964 in Wuxi, Jiangsu Province, China. Lives and works in Beijing.

Kirsten PALZ

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Kirsten was born 1971 in Copenhagen, Denmark. Lives and works in Berlin.

QIU Anxiong

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QIU Anxiong was born 1972 in Chengdu, China. Lives and works in Shanghai.

Nina E. SCHÖNEFELD

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Nina was born 1972 in Berlin, Germany. Lives and works in Berlin and Ibiza, Spain.

Shingo YOSHIDA

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Shingo YOSHIDA was born 1974 in Tokyo, Japan. Lives and works in Marseille, France.

Robert ZHAO RENHUI

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Robert was born 1983 in Singapore. Lives and works in Singapore.

ZHOU Xiaohou

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ZHOU Xiaohou was born 1960 in Changzhou, China. Lives and works in Shanghai.

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Landscapes of Futures Past

MIAO Xiaochun
Limitless, 2011-2012

4-Channel HD video animation, colour, sound

11:15

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Ice Age

Margret EICHER, 2024
Textile: digital collage, Jacquard-woven tapestry

130 x 260 cm

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A Monument to Thresholds

Robert ZHAO RENHUI, 2020
digital inkjet prints, found objects, with single-channel video

136.5(H)*123.5*218cm

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IMPACT

Kirsten PALZ, 2023–2025
HD video, colour, sound

12:00

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Windbell

LONG Pan, 2021

2-channel video installation:

Extract, HD video, colour, sound, 13:34

Wind Bell, HD video, colour, sound, on loop

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Minute Gesture

LIAO Wenfeng,2015-2016

Video installation of 5 video performances

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Then We Take Berlin

Margret EICHER, 2018
Textile: digital collage, Jacquard-woven tapestry

295 × 230 cm

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P. A. R. A. D. I. S. E.

Nina E. SCHÖNEFELD, 2023/2025
HD video, colour, sound

27:23

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TRILOGY OF TOMORROW

Nina E. SCHÖNEFELD

DARK WATERS(2018), HD video, b/w & colour, sound, 15:55

SNO W FOX(2018), HD video, b/w & colour, sound, 10:03

L.E.O.P.A.R.T.(2019), HD video, b/w & colour, sound, 17:13

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Farewell Poem

CHEN Qiulin, 2002
Video, colour, sound

9:00

Courtesy A Thousand Plateaus Art Space, Chengdu

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Peach Blossom

CHEN Qiulin, 2009
Video, colour, sound

16:40

Courtesy A Thousand Plateaus Art Space, Chengdu

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Dark star waterfall

Danie MELLOR, 2025
2-channel 4K video projection, colour, sound

25:10

Courtesy Cassandra Bird Gallery, Sydney

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The Past Is Singing In Our Teeth

Kate McMILLAN, 2017/2025
2-channel HD video installation, colour, sound

6:33; 3:11

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We Are The Flood

Stefano CAGOL

Selected works from We Are The Flood, a video performance series (2022-ongoing)

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MOMO

FENG Bingyi, 2016

2-channel video installation:The starting point is also the end point, HD video, colour, sound, 7:39

Monument, HD video, b/w, silent, 4:25

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The Garden of Forking Paths

ZHOU Xiaohou, 2016
HD video animation, colour, sound

20:04

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Tian Zhi Xiu Yue
(Close to Heaven, Fix the Moon)

QIU Anxiong, 2023
4K video animation, colour, sound

8:33

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Landscape

Unknown, 2025

Window installation, natural landscape 

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Open-Air Cinema

Curated by Li Zhenhua,

in partnership with CIFRA Platform

View More Exhibition Photograph

The works shown here are vessels for stories that unfold across time, revealing how landscapes are not static scenes, but living archives of human presence, absence, imagination and desire. The paradox of "futures past" written into the exhibition's title evokes spaces where both timelines collide, where utopias are imagined and erased, where memories and myth become embedded in the ground beneath our feet.

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At the entrance of Landscapes of Futures Past, a monumental oil painting installation immediately draws the viewer into the exhibition. Its towering scale and textured surface act as both a visual anchor and a spatial threshold, setting the tone for the unfolding journey through time, memory, and imagined landscapes.

Audience engaged with the artwork

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Exhibition Map

Some works reach back into ancestral geographies, where the earth resounds with echoes of identity, ritual, and resilience. Others confront ruptures — colonial scars, forced migrations and environmental erasures — that fracture our connection with the landscape and cast shadows on our future and past. Through intimate storytelling, speculative fictions, and poetic observations, these works invite viewers to gaze into the gaps between personal and collective memory to examine the landscapes we still carry within us, as well as those we have left behind.

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Acknowledgements

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