Far Away, From Home, 2024
Far Away, From Home, an image-based sculpture, is part of Zhang’s ongoing inquiry into the complexities of home, immigration, identity politics, diaspora, and queerness in the public sphere. Responding to the Chinese zodiac Year of the Dragon in 2024, Zhang re-interprets a curio cabinet reminiscent of furniture from the artist’s childhood home in Hunan, China. The shelving unit is filled up with backlit photographs of “tattooed” latex balloons on one side, and their paper collage doppelgängers on the opposite side. It also features laser-etched panels highlighting scenes from Huaniaohua, a traditional type of Chinese Bird-and-Flower Painting, as well as etchings of the original tattoo imagery Zhang used on the latex balloons. The four supporting legs are modeled after balusters in porch railings and stairways that Zhang has encountered over the past year in Massachusetts.
The title of this installation takes inspiration from the essay “Far Away, From Home: The Comma Between” by filmmaker and writer Trinh T. Minh-ha. Exploring Trinh’s musings on otherness as both “a site of return” and “a site of change,” the artist asks: “How can I map queer desires onto the tapestry of an ever evolving home? To what extent do the intertwined threads of my native and adopted cultures become blurred and indistinguishable? How can I complicate the experience of living in a state of liminality and in-betweenness without essentializing it?”
By displaying a domestic cabinet-like installation in the heart of Chinatown, Zhang’s work recreates an act of displacement embedded with counter narratives of resistance and resilience against flatness and simplistic interpretations. Far Away, From Home offers a patchy, slippery, and disorienting aesthetic experience with the hope of prioritizing care, queer joy, and openness while troubling the binary systems that limit who we can be and what we can build together.
Photos by Zhidong Zhang
Photos by Lee-Daniel Tran