trust & confusion

Remain Calm (Air氣) (2021)

trust & confusion

Echo, Moss and Spill

Pan Daijing, listening session two, and artist conversation with curator Xue Tan

Tino Sehgal

Songs of Ambivalence: A Performative Reading by Serene Hui

Mirrors, trust & confusion

Remain Calm (Air氣) (2021)

Time has fallen asleep in the afternoon sunshine by Mette Edvardsen

Listening Session by Pan Daijing

Date & Time

11 Sep - 10 Oct, 2021 Tue-Sun | 12:30pm-3:30pm & 4pm-6:30pm

Location

JC Contemporary

Price

Free of charge

General

Artist: Nile Koetting
Curators: Xue Tan, Raimundas Malašauskas
Associate Curator: Tom Engels
Assistant Curators: Louiza Ho, Erin Li

Text and script: Miriam Stoney 
Costume and styling: Belle Santons 
Movement design: Juan Felipe Amaya Gonzalez
Sound design: Nozomu Matsumoto
Technical design: Benjamin Maus
Video design: Yoshihiro Inada

Performers:
Chan Shun Chun Natasha
Chan Wai Lok
Aadityakrishna Sathish
So Yan Ting Esther
Tang Wai Ying, Crystal

Special thanks:
Things That Move Ltd.

A new phase of trust & confusion unveils, in the Night Room, a performative installation by the Japanese artist Nile Koetting (b.1989 in Japan; lives in Berlin), Remain Calm (Air ), which hosts audio, video, and live performances. This acclaimed work series—shown internationally at institutions such as Centre Pompidou x West Bund Museum Project (Shanghai), Palais de Tokyo (Paris), Sharjah Art Foundation (Sharjah), among others—reflects thoughtfully and imaginatively on today’s increasing presence of security and monitoring technologies together with their accompanying choreographies.

The commissioned project by Nile Koetting unfolds in two episodes—Remain Calm (Mobile +) from 1 May to 31 August in the Day Room and Remain Calm (Air ) from 11 September to 10 October in the Night Room.
 
Contrasting videos, lighting, and varying sounds, the installations have put safety and control mechanisms on centre stage. In Remain Calm (Air ), the scaled-up development shows four video screens introducing the museum’s visitors to preferable modes of conduct and evacuation routes. Meanwhile, a performance inspired by the evacuation protocols showcases performers’ heart rates and health information in real time. All the while, an ikebana flower arrangement adorns the space, and a displayed performance schedule instructs them how to get through the day—until another disaster hits.