York Chang has an aptitude for words. His command of language and heightened awareness of semantics, derived from his parallel practice as a civic defense lawyer in California, informs his work and his pedantic nature. His first UK solo show, “Zero Sum Games,” at London’s Edel Assanti gallery, is compelling.
The series “Closed Captioning” (2016), comprised of five frenzied collages of newspaper cuttings splayed on handmade Kozo paper, leads viewers into the exhibition and begins an introduction into Chang’s fastidious archival work. Taken from Chang’s long-term daily newspaper searches, the banners of text include phrases such as “A pawn finds her crown,” “The counterfeit,” “The real ones and their fictional relative,” and “Let statistics ruin,” which offer a witty and absurd perspective of the worldly events and a selective view to confront the spectacular nature of journalism. As Chang discussed in front of an audience on the opening evening on January 19, he is interested in journalistic accountability and the “question of responsibility that we want to give to ourselves or news organizations.”
His installation CMYK (2016) comprising four 55 gallon steel oil drums, positioned at intervals toward the back of the gallery, extend this investigation of journalistic credibility. He quantifies the results of his systematic survey and analysis of four print newspapers over the past 40 years. Each drum is filled with a volume of cmyk ink—green, blue and a deep purple—diluted to reflect the ratio of editorial content to images and advertising in this collection of newspapers. According to Chang’s measurements, written content has dropped to the extent that the ink is significantly watered down—to be precise, by 2 parts to 5. He attributes this to the pressures of online journalism and hopes that giving presence to this statistic will point to the general loss of influence of print; although he was keen to remind us that data is problematic and misused.
This line of thought concerning the irresponsible use of data is pursued by the artist in the work Summary of Evidence (2016). Forming a grid from 500 documents across the gallery’s charcoal walls, under lurid strip lights, Chang arranges facsimiles of declassified charging papers from America’s Combatant Status Review Tribunal from 2004. Hung from metal bindings common to legal files, the A4 sheets document the evidence used to justify holding 500 Guantanamo Bay detainees without trial. Yet there is an exception. Inserted into the grid is one fictitious charge contrived by Chang to expose the tenuous terminology and point to the superficial authority derived from legal language and frameworks. The “reliance on rhetoric is used to convey value,” the artist told me, and he ventured that law is a “staging of credibility” and that the documents “take advantage of a set of expectations of a courtroom.”
Given Chang’s role as a lawyer, he is clearly compromised. As his discrete Self-Portrait (2012) suggests, there is both a willingness to inhabit his legal role with the caveat that he retains a critical distance. Self-Portrait, a cease and desist letter written by Chang on behalf of an artist who was being evicted by her landlord, shows this negotiation of his legal vocation and personal values. The main body of the letter, recounting legal acts and evidence, is scrubbed out to reveal a message, a quotation from Jean Baudrillard, circled in red: “One dreams of a stealthy idea which would slip through all the detection systems without being spotted, and unfailingly reach its target.” As Chang described, he wants to create space for human qualities within the edifice of law.
Concerned with understanding deception, constructing and challenging institutional systems of truth, Chang’s work is intricate and provides an intelligent exploration of information and language in a period of unprecedented data exchange. The artist is keen to note the “flimsiness” of this material and will, as he told me, continue to seek the potential for deriving counter-narratives and formulating alternative histories.
“York Chang: Zero Sum Games” is on view at Edel Assanti, London, until February 18, 2017.
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