Close Menu
Simply Invest Asia
  • Home
  • About us
  • Explore industries/sectors
    • Automobile
    • Aviation
    • Banking
    • Biotechnology
    • Chemical & Fertilizer
    • Entertainment and Media
    • Food Processing
    • Healthcare
    • Iron and Steel
    • Leather
    • Mining
    • Oil and Gas
    • Pharmaceutical
  • Explore by countries
    • China
    • Dubai / UAE
    • Hong Kong
    • India
    • Indonesia
    • Japan
    • Malaysia
  • Explore cities
    • Bangkok
    • Beijing
    • Chongqing
    • Delhi
    • Dubai
    • Guangzhou
    • Jakarta
    • Kuala Lumpur
  • Why Asia
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Threads
Trending:
  • Tri Mumpuni, Member of Steering Committee of Indonesia’s National Research and Innovation Agency: BRICS can drive development through technology sharing
  • Father-Son Duo Turn Heroes in Delhi Fire Tragedy
  • Badminton: Pearly-Thinaah, Soon Huat-Shevon keep Malaysian hopes alive in Jakarta
  • Dubai’s Rise in the Global Financial Centres Index Signals a Shift in Capital Flows
  • Mishcon expands Middle East presence with new Dubai office – The Lawyer
  • Major Japanese Firms Boost Wages by Over 5% Again in 2026
  • Flight Cuts Prompt India to Launch Jet Fuel Fund – Energy Intelligence
  • Hong Kong’s MTR Corporation raises €3 billion in its first public euro green bond sale
  • UAE hands over two Russians wanted on corruption, security charges
  • Egypt Approves $52.97 Mn Exploration Agreements for Mediterranean, Nile Delta
  • Japanese nationals injured during disposal of abandoned chemical weapons in China
  • China built a 300-meter, 40,000-ton horizontal building, hoisted it to a height of 250 meters, and impresses with a suspended building that features a panoramic viewpoint, gardens, restaurants, and an infinity pool in Chongqing.
  • Indonesia’s electrification rate reaches 99.83 percent in Q1 2026
  • Hong Kong police to launch 2-week crackdown on distracted drivers and jaywalkers
  • India Establishes $1B Fuel Price Stabilization Fund
  • Here’s your full-day guide to One Bangkok, from morning runs to midnight bites
  • MISC renews Menara Dayabumi lease with PETRONAS in RM433 mil 15-year deal
  • Isaac Del Toro and Paul Seixas battle
Thursday, June 4
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Simply Invest Asia
  • Home
  • About us
  • Explore industries/sectors
    • Automobile
    • Aviation
    • Banking
    • Biotechnology
    • Chemical & Fertilizer
    • Entertainment and Media
    • Food Processing
    • Healthcare
    • Iron and Steel
    • Leather
    • Mining
    • Oil and Gas
    • Pharmaceutical
  • Explore by countries
    • China
    • Dubai / UAE
    • Hong Kong
    • India
    • Indonesia
    • Japan
    • Malaysia
  • Explore cities
    • Bangkok
    • Beijing
    • Chongqing
    • Delhi
    • Dubai
    • Guangzhou
    • Jakarta
    • Kuala Lumpur
  • Why Asia
Simply Invest Asia
Home»Explore cities»Guangzhou»Guangzhou Image Triennial 2025 Review: The Case for Sensitivity
Guangzhou

Guangzhou Image Triennial 2025 Review: The Case for Sensitivity

By IslaApril 20, 20265 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Threads Bluesky Copy Link


The latest edition addresses the current crisis of technological mediation

‘Our digital existence has led to a crisis of sensitivity’, claims the exhibition text that opens the Guangzhou Image Triennial 2025. It’s a crisis ‘favoring the mediation of images’ and ‘depriving us of direct contact with nature’, the text continues. Founded as the Guangzhou Photo Biennial in 2005, its latest edition, the third since its rebranding in 2017, is positioned against this crisis of technological mediation in which we are increasingly out of touch with the physical world. It aims at opening up ‘new forms of attention’ and perception through works by over 50 artists and artist groups, spread over four of Guangdong Art Museum’s 21 galleries, that attempt to help us understand our connection with the material world, and salvage the medium from becoming little more than digital mediation.

While the exhibition text cites a cadre of 11 theorists (from ‘ecosophers’ such as Felix Guattari to neo-materialists like Bruno Latour) to explain its mission, what the show boils down to is a materialist turn in imagemaking: an emphasis on what images are over what they show or represent, resisting what Siobhan Angus, in her Camera Geologica, calls ‘photography’s desire to transcend its material origins’. Amélie Labourdette’s A Pure Spirit Grows Beneath the Bark of Stones (2021–22), for example, is a series of photographs of fern fossils, showing delicate leaves and veins preserved in rocks. Though their forms resemble early specimens and decorative patterns from the fern-fevered Victorian-era, printed in coal-based Piezography ink, they also encourage us to read them as minerals rather than pictures: a trace of the plant on its way of becoming coal. Chen Xiaoyi’s A Star Atlas from Hengduan’s Core (2022) is a photograph presented as a physical object. Framed within the panels of a wooden folding-screen, the photograph depicts a mountain range at night, where lights from mines and excavation sites glow in pitch darkness. Here the format of the image is built into the story it tells: the folding screen’s function to divide and hide becomes a metaphor in which images can conceal instead of reveal the truth – in this case, the labour and extraction that takes place beneath the pretty lights.

Munem Wasif, Seeds Shall Set Us Free (detail), 2017–21 (installation view). Courtesy the artist and Project 88, Mumbai

Of course, foregrounding the materiality of images does not automatically overcome the problem of mediation. To establish an ‘ecology of sensitivity’ is to be cautious about photography’s own flattening effects. Sean Cham’s Eastern Promise (2024–26) series pictures him reenacting the performative poses of Chinese coolies in colonial photographs of ‘racial types’, excavating the corporeal experiences of these people turned into portable objects of the Western gaze. Though not all the work shows that photography as a medium can be salvaged. Bangladeshi artist Munem Wasif’s Seeds Shall Set Us Free  (2017–21) is an arrangement of objects in three vitrines: photographs of farmers in rice fields and closeups of starved bodies, cyanotypes of rice, drawings of farming tools and snippets of records from local grain-banks. A wall text tells us that as a British colony, Bengal (now split between Bangladesh and India) was ordered to prioritise cultivating cash crops such as indigo and jute over rice, which, alongside the British military’s grain hoarding, contributed to a 1943 famine that killed millions. What emerges from the display is both a narrative of many fragments, showing the grain as a source of subsistence, knowledge and control, and a sense of the gaps between them – the inability of any one of these elements to elucidate truth. It’s a powerful work that takes seriously photography’s inadequacy – even positioning against – when it comes to providing depth and understanding beyond its mediation.

The exhibition’s last section – which explores the rippling effects of material extractions and their environmental impacts – reads either like an elevation or a detour to the exhibition’s theoretical musings. Works on view touch on oil drilling, mining and the undersea cables that support today’s (digital, if you make the conceptual leap) world. In this vein are Abraham Onoriode Oghobase’s photographs of Nigeria’s contemporary landscapes with twentieth-century diagrams of mining facilities superimposed (Metallurgical Practice: Landscape, 2019), or Liu Yujia’s film on oil extraction in northwestern China, depicting a landscape near ruination in the face of increasing industrial structures (Black Ocean, 2016). Though surprisingly none of these works engages with digital photography’s own material footprints – from the lithium mining that powers the battery industry to the data centres that feed today’s generative AIs. What’s at stake is a different kind of ‘sensitivity’: not of our literal senses, but an attention to our treatment of nature as mere resource, a view that paved the way for the larger issues of landgrab, extractive capitalism and colonial ecocide. If this final turn to environmental issues shows us that ‘aesthetics’ and ‘perception’ are indeed political matters, it is strange to find the politics of photography left out of the picture.

Guangzhou Image Triennial 2025 Ecology of Sensitivity is on view at Guangdong Museum of Art, Guangzhou, through 5 May

From the Spring 2026 issue of ArtReview Asia – get your copy.

Yuwen JiangReviewsApril 20, 2026ArtReview Asia



Source link

Related Posts

Jixiangfang – Electric vessel for nighttime sightseeing in Guangzhou

June 4, 2026

Guangdong trains WorldSkills contestants – Chinadaily.com.cn

June 4, 2026

Guangzhou Zhiguang Electric and Rigol Technologies Post S…

June 3, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

Chinese Wall may stem India tech flows for electronics and automobile

June 1, 2026

Abandoned malls, whispers of nuclear war and young foreigners detained. This is what’s REALLY going on in Dubai… and the chilling warning one taxi driver gave to the Mail’s IAN BIRRELL

April 11, 2026

Dubai food conglomerate IFFCO set to go into provisional liquidation – Financial Times

May 3, 2026
Don't Miss

Tri Mumpuni, Member of Steering Committee of Indonesia’s National Research and Innovation Agency: BRICS can drive development through technology sharing

By IslaJune 4, 2026

Technology sharing and knowledge exchange should become key drivers of development within BRICS, according…

Father-Son Duo Turn Heroes in Delhi Fire Tragedy

June 4, 2026

Badminton: Pearly-Thinaah, Soon Huat-Shevon keep Malaysian hopes alive in Jakarta

June 4, 2026

Dubai’s Rise in the Global Financial Centres Index Signals a Shift in Capital Flows

June 4, 2026
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

Get our latest downloads and information first. Complete the form below to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.


I consent to being contacted via telephone and/or email and I consent to my data being stored in accordance with European GDPR regulations and agree to the terms of use and privacy policy.

Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Top Trending

Indonesia’s electrification rate reaches 99.83 percent in Q1 2026

By IslaJune 4, 2026

Hong Kong police to launch 2-week crackdown on distracted drivers and jaywalkers

By IslaJune 4, 2026

India Establishes $1B Fuel Price Stabilization Fund

By IslaJune 4, 2026
Most Popular

French luxury store Galeries Lafayette shuts Beijing flagship branch after 13 years

May 27, 2026

Hyundai and Kia Sell 174,860 Units in U.S. in May, Achieve Record-High Eco-Friendly Vehicle Sales

June 4, 2026

Delayed parenthood: Are couples are waiting to have children

May 5, 2026
Our Picks

High Court to decide on Shamsul Iskandar’s bid to transfer graft case on April 28

April 9, 2026

Chinese-developed exoskeleton in spotlight at Canton Fair

April 24, 2026

Silal reinforces its commitment to UAE supply chain resilience and sustainable food security

April 17, 2026
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

Get our latest downloads and information first. Complete the form below to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.


I consent to being contacted via telephone and/or email and I consent to my data being stored in accordance with European GDPR regulations and agree to the terms of use and privacy policy.

© 2026 Simply Invest Asia.
  • Get In Touch
  • Cookie Policy
  • Privacy policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTER

Get our latest downloads and information first.

Complete the form below to subscribe to our weekly newsletter.


I consent to being contacted via telephone and/or email and I consent to my data being stored in accordance with European GDPR regulations and agree to the terms of use and privacy policy.