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Edie siyi

@e__xu

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Weeks posts
Oxygenated 2023 Stone ware 75 x 60 x 30 inches (190 x 152 x 76cm) This piece was fired multiple times at different temperatures to achieve layers of tonal and texture variations while consistently using the same hand mixed clay body Photographed by @scottburgermeister
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1 year ago
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5 years ago
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3 months ago
Honey suckle Hand blown glass, oxidized metal, raku fired ceramic @caijinspace
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5 months ago
(hair) @caijinspace
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5 months ago
Corte-tial Slip cast porcelain, metal pedestal, irregular light flicker
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5 months ago
susurrant bow Motorized gu qin string, hand blown glass, oxidized metal
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5 months ago
𝘐𝘕𝘛𝘙𝘈 《袅绕》currently on view @caijinspace till November 30th In the environment she constructs, the visible is only one part. Slender, sharp glass tubes are linked together, emitting faint murmurs. Scattered ceramic pieces, cracks, and subtle scents dispersed in the air demand careful attention. Xu draws from the recollections of middle-aged people who grew up in the 798 Art District, retrieving the “flesh” of the old factory that no longer exists—rubber and iron, slightly damp,invading the nostrils. Here, vision is intentionally dampened, woven together on more equal footing with hearing and smell. This inevitably recalls Proust’s In Search of Lost Time, where a bite of tea-soaked madeleine instantly draws Marcel back into the memory scape of his childhood village. The sensory mechanism behind this—where scent and taste simultaneously stimulate the amygdala (the emotional center) and the hippocampus(the memory center)—is echoed here. Sound similarly tugs at and disperses our visual attention; the soundscape becomes another tunnel leading inward, its shifting vibrations cueing spatial memories. This poetic activation of multiple senses allows thought to exist in a drifting state—dissolving and then slowly gathering again after a deliberate softening of focus. Within such an atmosphere, the presence of tangible objects—and the logic of their forms—can finally be felt. These are the various “vessels” the artist has created: transparent, fractured, suspended between clarity and disappearance. Their visual presence is “lowered” into a register not unlike that of scent or sound, a faint signal on the edge of perception. This aligns with Xu’s long-standing approach to sensory cognition: her works do not proclaim themselves loudly, but instead turn like subtle wheels of time, releasing a gentle glimmer. Such perception requires both the quiet attentiveness of the viewer and the artist’s precise attunement to trace-like forms of existence—those fleeting points where they brush against human memory. — Yao Siqing
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5 months ago
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6 months ago
Some moments @haystack_school the past two weeks🫶🏻
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8 months ago
Sound of Kiln currently on view @bankmabsociety ‘to save and to destroy’ curated by @dionysus.in.modernity Stoneware fired with up cycled ceramic 19 x 39 x 20
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9 months ago
Like fabric, the boat like vessel is dipped again and again into a cement vat filled with indigo dye. Over time, the blue seeps into the skin and pores of the clay body—and into the hands of the maker.. Indigo blue, a color vastly used across the Miao, Dong, and Buyi people from everyday wear to wedding garments, weaves the community together both spiritually and culturally. During spring, the indigo plant is seeded, then blended and pressed into a paste, sold in markets and fermented in the vats of every other household. Each batch is medicinal, carrying its own distinct scent and hue. - Captured w/ @_snttw_
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9 months ago