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27 June 2025

Artists' Talks | Hangfeng Chen and Jing He

Artist Talk | June 27, 2025 | 14.30 - 17.00 | Grotezaal, Wereldmuseum Leiden

The Research Center for Material Culture is pleased to invite you to our upcoming talk with artists Hangfeng Chen and Jing He from our Made in China exhibition, currently on view at Wereldmuseum Rotterdam. This conversation is a continuation of the conference De-Imperializing Histories and Blazing Forms, which will take place on June 25-26 at Wereldmuseum Rotterdam.

 

Registration information for this event will come soon. To register for the conference, visit the De-Imperialising Histories website.

More on the event

The exhibition Made In China is currently on view at the Wereldmuseum Rotterdam (until 31 August 2025). Covering a multitude of forms of making, including art, design, fashion, photography and video, it considers the past and the present of making and what it tells us about being human. Moreover, the exhibition situates its inquiry from the perspective of China, a site often invoked in relation to making, as referenced in the title "Made In China." In distinction to the associations with this phrase, the exhibition showcases the long lineages of making practices that lead into the contemporary moment. In this session, two artists featured in the exhibition, Jing He and Hangfeng Chen, will reflect on their practices in relation to ideas of making and perspectives from China, after which they engage in conversation with the curator of the exhibition, Willemijn van Noord. 

Program

14.30 - 14.45Doors Open
14.45 - 15.00Introduction by Wayne Modest 
15.05 - 15.45Artist Talk: Hangfeng Chen
15.50 - 16.20Artist Talk: Jing He
16.20 - 17.00Discussion moderated by Willemijn van Noord

About the artists

Hangfeng Chen is a visual artist and filmmaker working between Amsterdam and Shanghai. His practice centers on the reappropriation and juxtaposition of archival materials to create a dynamic dialogue between personal memory and historical narrative. This interdisciplinary approach has led him to move fluidly between fine arts and cinema, particularly in the realms of papercut, collage, drawing, and animation. Through this process, Chen explores layered connections that transcend time and geography, reflecting on hybridity and entanglement in the anthropocentric era. Chen studied painting and art history at the Shanghai Fine Art College (BA) and holds a master’s degree from the Netherlands Film Academy. He is currently an artist and researcher in residence at the University of Amsterdam, within the Faculty of Humanities.

 

Chen's works have been exhibited and collected internationally, including by the Rockbund Museum (Shanghai), Today Art Museum (Beijing), Palais de Tokyo (Paris), Collective Gallery (Edinburgh), Chinese Arts Center (Manchester), Casino Luxembourg, Cable Gallery (Helsinki), SinArts Gallery, Lissa Art Museum, Tropenmuseum (Amsterdam), and the White Rabbit Museum (Sydney). His films have been shown at CinemAsia (Amsterdam), MADATAC Festival (Madrid), N-Minutes Video Art Festival (Helsinki), and the 57th International Short Film Festival Oberhausen (MIACA program).

CH work
Hangfeng Chen, still from short film An Intertwined Dream, 2024

Jing He (she/her) is a visual artist and educator currently based in Rotterdam. She is the cofounder of the Tulip Trust Collective. Her interest in culture, politics and the history behind various daily objects, leads to imaginative visual representations involving various materials and mediums. Jing He's works have been included in the collection of The Art of Institute of Chicago (US); Françoise van den Bosch Foundation (NL) collection, which is held by the Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam (NL); Design Society Shenzhen (CN).

JH work
Title: Tulip Pyramid - copy and identity, 2016. Collaboration with: Rongkai He , Cheng Guo , Weiyi Li, Dangdang Xing , Dawei Yang

Willemijn van Noord is curator China at Wereldmuseum. After completing her studies in archaeology and sinology at Leiden University and the School of Oriental and African Studies in London, she has worked as trainee-curator at the British Museum and Bristol Museum & Art Gallery, focusing on Ming dynasty (1368–1644) porcelain and Qing dynasty (1644–1911) glass and snuff-bottles. In 2024, she successfully defended her PhD thesis Materialising China: material culture and perceptions of China in the late seventeenth-century Dutch Republic

Visit the exhibition

MIC header
Made in China
Link
Zico
More on the De-Imperializing Histories and Blazing Forms Conference
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