Whitney Biennial 2024

2024

A twisted and porous bone structure with cavities and pearl-like objects.

Jes Fan: My name is Jes Fan. I’m an artist primarily working in sculptures.

I did a CT scan of myself and then I 3-D printed out different parts of my internal body's musculature. Contrapposto, that large standing piece, is different muscle groups of my leg segmented.

Narrator: The artist describes this as looking like his leg has exploded, like a diagram in an instruction manual. 

Jes Fan: And then the wall pieces are cross sections of my leg just on the wall. And then the last piece, Gut, is a CT scan of my stomach. And then hidden within the walls of the museum as a way to suggest some sort of impregnating the construct of the gallery, but also thinking about experiencing a work not just visually but also visceral, like internal experience.

Narrator: Fan draws both the color palette and the conceptual foundation for the sculptures from a kind of incense wood grown in the Middle East. 

Jes Fan: It's called agarwood, or also known as oud, O-U-D. And the tree is similar to frankincense, or a lot of incense trees. It's only fragrant when the tree undergoes some sort of injury, be it a cut or be it some sort of wounding.

I started thinking about the type of internal woundings that I or other bodies of color or queer bodies carry that aren't visual, but it's something like a type of infection, a type of injury that's been subdued for so long that the host starts to begin to eschew it into something generative. 

But essentially it's a pigmented resin, then gets sanded back to reveal the layers that actually creates the mass. So essentially, the surface is the mass, the surface is the accrual of the layers that created the form. There's a saying in Chinese that says the surface, or it mostly refers to people's appearance, but it says 相由心生 [xiāng yóu xīn shēng]. Which is, your appearance or surface comes from your internal being.


Jes Fan, Cross Section (Right Leg Muscle III), 2023. PLA filaments, fiberglass, resin, pigment, glass, 19 x 31 x 13 in. (48.26 x 78.74 x 33.02 cm). Collection of the artist. Commissioned by M+ Museum, Hong Kong. Courtesy the artist; Empty Gallery, Hong Kong; and Andrew Kreps Gallery, New York. Photograph by Olympia Shannon

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