The Emotional Tapestry of Urban Spaces

 

The Emotional Tapestry of Urban Spaces

OPENING    

Saturday, February 1, 2025 6-8 pm                                                                  

ON VIEW                    

February 1-23, 2025

Wednesday–Sunday 1–6pm and by appointment 

The Emotional Tapestry of Urban Spaces

PS122 Gallery is excited to present The Emotional Tapestry of Urban Spaces, featuring works by Jingyao Huang, Sève Favre and Henrik Langsdorf. This exhibition explores the emotional undercurrents within urban spaces and the profound ways in which individuals and communities relate to their environments. Urban planning generally prioritizes strict rationality and function over human experience. As a result, it often dismisses the crucial role emotions play in how we live, remember, and connect with spaces. This exhibition seeks to challenge this standard by elevating the overlooked affects—emotions, feelings, and intuitions—that people invest in their surroundings.

The Emotional Tapestry of Urban Spaces reveals cities as landscapes, where memory, identity, trauma, and feeling converge beyond or despite functional constructs. Each artwork invites viewers to uncover the layers of emotion embedded in the city’s fabric, highlighting the powerful bond between people and place. By elevating these unseen connections, the exhibition urges us to honour the unseen forces that truly bring cities to life.

Jingyao Huang combines geometry, a recurring theme in urban design, with emotive, lyrical impressions, contrasting the rational design of cities with the fluid, subjective experiences of those who inhabit them. Through digital reassemblies, dismantled photographs, paintings, and installations, the exhibition brings fragmented memories into the present, illustrating how ideology and memory shape our interactions with urban spaces.

Sève Favre maps the “emotional cartography” of a city, exploring how topography and memory intertwine. In her works -exploring her own memories and experiences or during participatory project- created from a city’s topographical data, historical records, and photography, she invites attendees to share personal experiences tied to urban spaces. Here, urban paths become conduits for emotional memory, turning the city into a labyrinth of collective and individual recollections. The act of projection—both as cartographic practice and psychological process—demonstrates how we continuously infuse our environments with meaning.

Henrik Langsdorf explores the “post-architectural” stage of urban life, where structures are no longer inhabited according to their original design. Through collage and video, he imagines architecture in new contexts, blending it with organic forms to evoke living, breathing organisms that grow organically rather than through rigid planning. Humans, often marginalized, appear resilient against disenfranchisement, while decaying architecture gains a malleable, life-like quality which doesn’t exist in the reality of urban dwellings and their structural requirements.

Artists Biographies

Sève Favre’s work has been exhibited internationally, including among others Centro de Arte UNLP, (Argentina), At The OFFSpace (Switzerland), Bienalsur 2021 (Saudi Arabia and Argentina), Filippo Contemporary/Galeria Nueva (Spain), Atopos at SPARC Venezia (Italy), CICA Museum (South Korea), Larnaca Biennale (Zyprus), Fondation WRP (Switzerland). She has taken part in international art residencies such as at La Paternal Espacio Proyecto (Argentina), Domaine de Boisbuchet (France), Pedvale Art Park and Museum (Latvia), Rimbun Dahan (Malaysia), Studio at MASS MoCA (USA) and Vermont Studio Center (USA), Hello New York by CPR (USA). She was a finalist for the 14th Arte Laguna Prize in the installation and sculpture section. In 2022, she was co-recipient of the “Art en partage/Etat du Valais” grant to develop access to contemporary art in retirement homes (Switzerland). She was also longlisted for the Aesthetica Art Prize 2024 and this year, she will take part at VCCA Residency (USA). Sève Favre mostly lives and works in Lausanne, Switzerland.

@sevefavrewww.sevefavre.com

Jingyao Huang’s work has been recognized with the School of Visual Arts Alumni Award and has been exhibited at prominent venues, including Rooftop Art Center, China (2024), TheBlanc Space, New York (2024), Scholart Foundation, Los Angeles (2024), Latitude Gallery, New York (2023), Chambers Fine Art, New York (2023), Ki Smith Gallery, New York (2023), 2522 House Studio, China (2022). Her works are held in the collections of international institutions and private collectors, including TheBlanc Art Space, New York, Zhu Zai Ji Restaurant, Guangzhou, and the Foshan Four Seasons Art Collective, Guangzhou. She holds a bachelor’s degree in photography and Video and a master’s degree in fine arts from the School of Visual Arts in New York.

@jingyao_huang | www.jingyaohuang.com

Henrik Langsdorf’s work has been shown at the Congo Biennale, ruruhaus (run by documenta fifteen), MARKK Museum Hamburg, Kassel Architektur Zentrum, Galleria Kollektiva and Hugenottenhaus (both in partnership with documenta 15) in Kassel, Germany, Arsenale Nord, Venice and Doual’Art, Douala, Cameroon. His video work has been recognized at international film festivals, including Berlin Indie Film Festival, London Independent Film, and New York International Film Awards. In 2021 he founded Blind Spots in the Sun, an art initiative addressing colonial history and racism in Germany. In 2023, he was an artist-in-residence at the Curatorial Program for Research in New York. Langsdorf’s work is held in private collections in the United States, Germany and Switzerland. He divides his time between New York and Kassel, Germany.

@henriklangsdorfwww.henriklangsdorf.com

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Free Public Events

Seve Favre: Artist Talk and Workshop: “Emotional Mapping”

Based on the wheel of emotions, “Emotional mapping” allows participants to become aware of how they feel when they move around a neighbourhood: favourite paths, avoided roads, places that make people happy, places of collective or individual history, geographical points of bad memories. Friday February. 7, 6-8pm & Saturday, Feb 8, 2-4pm

 

Artist talk: Ville Fantôme – from Utopia to the Present

Sunday February 23rd 3pm

Henrik Langsdorf and Malkit Shoshan engage in a critical dialogue on utopian architecture and urban planning.  Langsdorf will discuss the work of Bodys Isek Kingelez and introduce the concept of the ‘post-architectural’ stage in his own work, while Shoshan addresses challenges of urban planning and its humanitarian aspects in rapidly growing and post-conflict areas.

Malkit Shoshan is a designer, researcher, educator, writer, and the founding director of the award-winning architectural think tank FAST: Foundation for Achieving Seamless Territory. FAST’s projects explore and make visible the relationships between architecture, urban planning, and human rights. Malkit is a design critic and senior Loeb scholar at Harvard Graduate School of Design.

Closing reception of the exhibition “The Emotional Tapestry of Urban Spaces”

Sunday February 23rd 4-6pm

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Sève Favre met Henrik Langsdorf during the artistic residency ‘ ‘Hello New York by CPR’’ in 2023 and Jingyao Huang during the residency at Vermont Studio Center in 2024. “The Emotional Tapestry of Urban Spaces” is their first exhibition together. Special Thanks to Kaleb Wise, the PS122 Advisory Board, and Nancy Paredes for helping to make this show happen!