Steven He and Seongeun Lee / Curated by Jia Yeu He
19th April – 5th May 2024
49 Staffordshire St,
London,
SE15 5TJ
photo credits: George Baggaley
Staffordshire St presents Stove by a Whale :
Momentarily onto Neither Land nor Sea, a collabo-
ration between Steven He and Seongeun Lee
curated by Jiayue He. Together, they draw inspira-
tion from their different journeys. Steven explores
the peculiar ways in which our attention can be
drawn, he aims to tease out the mechanisms that
help these ideas plant themselves in our minds
whilst Seongeun translates the harsh realities of
life into the language of dreams. Jiayue brings these
two together to explore the notion of contemporary
archives questioning how individuals connect to
their roots and claim their identities.
A space where tides change, and the ground isn’t firm.
Steven and Seongeun have been larking in the mud,
collecting objects from Thames beaches and their
living environments to construct and combine
materials where time and history differs & shifts
with the moving tide. The site specific installation
embodies the transient nature of immigrants, weav-
ing a fictional story involving water, a whale and a
ship.
The show is titled after the first-hand account of a
whale attack in 1820 by a crew member of the Essex,
a ship that later inspired Herman Melville to write
his 1851 novel Moby-Dick. Considering the ship as
both a historical and folklore version of the classic,
cosmopolitan city; the site of shipwreck serves as a
reminder of the bittersweet nature of settling down
and exploring the invisible, conditional identities
travellers must adopt to live a life in a foreign land.
Land is synonymous with boundaries and border-
lines, evoking feelings of security and belonging,
yet simultaneously denoting seclusion and differ-
entiation. The whale represents the blurred dreams
that are absent from the scene.
Audiences are invited to walk around the space,
speculating on the site of ruins while discovering
new living entities within. From far to close, utopi-
an dreams may fracture after arrival, but in doing
so, they also leave space for potential rebirth. The
show connects border-crossing journeys between
the water and the land, encouraging viewers to
contemplate the complex nature of contemporary
immigration.