Rising Artist Lin Ke on Using the Laptop as an Art Studio

By Andrew Chin, February 3, 2017

2 0

The accelerated collision between the digital world and physical spaces is the subject of buzzed-about Beijing artist Lin Ke’s first Shanghai solo exhibition at BANK. Utilizing the laptop as an art studio and gallery with limitless possibilities, Like Me spans digitally altered works to ones capturing the mundane real-time actions towards artistic creation in the computer age.

Lin Ke: Like Me

“I don’t have a real studio, so I use my computer [instead],” he explains. “I can treat it like a space to store my works or to imagine all the possibilities of how they will be presented.”

 In a series of digital works, Lin has downloaded gallery installation photos that he utilizes as larger than life desktop images that are blown-up and displayed.

Lin Ke: Like Me

In others, he is an active participant, simultaneously as performer and creator.

“Sometimes I use the laptop camera that I control from a distance with a touchpad and record my movements to music, so there is that interaction as well,” he explains.

“It’s really personifying the point of view of this machine looking at us looking at them,” adds the show's curator and BANK owner Mathieu Borysevicz. “That interaction is profound even though he’s just playing. That’s where we are today.”

Lin Ke: Like Me

In the titular video work, Lin explicitly lays out commentary on the modern era by using an unexpected source.

“I really love Star Trek and there was a speech that felt really prophetic about how we are living now in the digital era,” he explains.

“The day before, I was listening to Korean rap and was inspired to create my own rap with that dialogue by using music I found from Soundcloud.”

Lin Ke: Like Me

That playfulness can be found in his artistic attitude, where he bashfully notes, “Everything I do is for fun and to make everyone feel happy. It’s really not very ambitious.”

Borysevicz can only chuckle about Lin’s assessment of himself. “Sometimes I describe his work as it’s so dumb, it’s good,” he smiles before describing a piece as “he just has his hand on a button.”

“But this is the life that we’re leading now,” Borysevicz adds. “There’s a lot of dry humor to his self portraits and this richness when you think about how each of us are spending eight hours a day on our devices. That dimension and its relationship to reality, and how those two are flattening slowly. He’s really articulated in an interesting way even if he kind of came on this space accidentally.”

Lin Ke: Like Me

The show is the second exhibition at BANK’s new space on Anfu Lu. While its original location in a historic building on the dark side of the Bund instantly lent the gallery edgy credibility, Borysevicz is happy with the new digs.

“We saw this space and like 200 others in every pocket of this city,” he says. “The old space had a very specific history but the problem with them is that we could only sign short term leases.”

“We didn’t need to be in this posh neighborhood, but we needed to be secure. When we actually came in, there were piles of rubble, as the space hadn’t been used in seven or eight years. By leaving some of what was here before uncovered and being somewhat underground in this bougie neighborhood, it’s a gesture on its own to our character.”

Until Feb 20. BANK, Bldg 2, B/F, Lane 298 Anfu Lu, by Wulumuqi Lu 安福路298号, 近乌鲁木齐路 (6301 3622, info@mabsociety.com)

more news

The 18th Festival Croisements Kicks Off in South China

Over 400 captivating events are scheduled to take place across 31 cities nationwide.

Interview: Zhao Renxiu and Ale Amazonia, Behind China's Newest Creative Hub

The three-pronged project, Subtropical Asia, has already got a lot on its plate.

Interview: Legendary Singer Pankaj Udhas on His Upcoming China Tour

Known to leave his audiences spellbound, That’s spoke to the legend himself to find what out we can expect from his first-ever China tour.

Interview: 'Above the Drowning Sea' Director René Balcer

We interviewed award-winning television director René Balcer to find out more about his newest doc, a chronicle of Jewish refugees in 1940s Shanghai.

Interview: Enter Shikari's Rou Reynolds on Asia Tour, Nu-Rave and Anxiety

The band will land in Guangzhou this Monday for the only Chinese date on their Asian tour in support of new album 'The Spark.'

The 2017 China Arts & Entertainment Approval Matrix

In the spirit of New York Magazine's famous hierarchy of good and bad taste, we present our Arts 2017 Approval Matrix.

Interview: American Matthew Knowles on Starring in China's Most Expensive Film

We talk to the man who went from volunteer English teacher in Guizhou to blockbuster movie star in just a few short years.

Interview: DJ Gareth Emery on His Latest Album and Upcoming South China Tour

We caught up with the man with ‘100 reasons to live’ ahead of his upcoming South China performances.

0 User Comments

In Case You Missed It…

We're on WeChat!

Scan our QR Code at right or follow us at thatsonline for events, guides, giveaways and much more!

7 Days in China With thatsmags.com

Weekly updates to your email inbox every Wednesday

Download previous issues

Never miss an issue of That's Magazines!

Visit the archives