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At Liste Art Fair Basel 2026, Booth 97, Seoul-based gallery Shower presents new works by Ruofan Chen. In this video, Katie Lee Arsac offers an intimate look at the pieces, revealing several unexpected elements.Building on her 2025 solo exhibition Dust at Shower—which traced the invisible continuum from industrial workshops to equestrian arenas, treating particulate matter as forensic evidence of systemic failure—Chen now turns her gaze to the art world’s own hidden ecologies. The new body of work examines the overlooked exposure of all art workers (installers, technicians, artists, fabricators, and gallery staff alike) to the ambient toxins of production: silica dust from composite boards, pigment residues, and the pervasive chemical haze of adhesives and fire retardants.

Ruofan Chen at Shower, Seoul / Liste Art Fair Basel 2026. Basel (Switzerland), June 17, 2026.
Transcript
00:00Hi, we're Shower Gallery and we're from Seoul.
00:03And this is our director, Guan Su Xin, and Peter Lee, who is the gallery manager.
00:09And they are both gallerists and art handlers and technicians who form a very unique community
00:15in our city.
00:21Hi, my name is Katie.
00:23I'm booth girl at Shower.
00:25Shower is a gallery based in Seoul run by artists, technicians, and laborers who help
00:30produce boundary-pushing works for emerging artists.
00:34This year, it's our second year at Lista Art Fair, and we're presenting Ruofan Chen.
00:41She's an artist based in Shanghai.
00:43Her work is about working with various laborers and construction workers and the various ambient
00:51toxins and environments that they are exposed to.
00:55Her work is called Counterweight, which is an installation created and produced in collaboration
01:02with Shower Gallery.
01:05This huge installation of plywood is actually supported by a very thin stack of layers of
01:14wood veneers, and she's thinking about this precarious architecture and also the working conditions
01:21of laborers that participated in the art fair itself.
01:25And I can show you one of the most important parts of this work is actually very behind, in
01:35the corners of this installation, and below you can actually see really thin layers of wood veneers
01:42that are supporting the structure.
01:44And this is almost like a tangible element that you can see where she's taking these elements
01:52such as dust that accumulate in your body without knowing until it has irreversible harm.
01:57So, in fact, these layers show this type of accumulation, the little things that build up in your body to
02:07have a force that it supports this entire structure as such.
02:12And actually, one of the most amazing things about Ruofan's work is that it's architectural
02:17and the large scale is a looming presence in the room, but also there are very delicate moments
02:24that she's trying to convey through her work.
02:27So, these paintings, they in fact mimic scratches of discarded plywood, and it's an oil painting on one side,
02:44and there's very delicate moments of patchwork inside the painting itself.
02:51So, she's thinking about these paintings almost as skin.
02:55Something that looks solid at first discarded, an industrial material, but it feels like a permeable surface, almost like the
03:05body, just as we assume the toxins and various dust and environment things within the fabrication environment.
03:36So, even though these little windows seem like solid plywood, they're in fact permeable surfaces, and it's a very important
03:42element.
03:42And it's made of very delicate silk organza, and they're paintings that mimic the surface of scratched plywood that you
03:51can find lying around in factories.
03:53So, it's important for the artist to make sure we look at the things that we have overlooked, and that
04:01the little things could actually have various effects of systemic harm.
04:16The work serves both as an installation, but also these pieces are acquirable individually, and in fact they're paintings that
04:25we have created a special frame where you can see both sides of the painting fixed on the wall as
04:31well.
04:31And then...
04:34And then...
04:34And then...
04:58And then...
05:01And then...
05:04...
05:29I would like to add the discussion around here...
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