Xiaoyu Weng

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Born
Shanghai, China
Occupationscurator, writer, editor and educator
Xiaoyu Weng
翁笑雨
Born
Shanghai, China
Occupationscurator, writer, editor and educator

Xiaoyu Weng (翁笑雨) is a Shanghai-born, New York-based curator, writer, editor and educator in the area of contemporary art. Her curatorial practice has a wide range of interests, among them the impact of globalization, the convergence of art, science, and technology, and emerging ecological and environmental transformations through the lens of feminism, identity, and decolonization.[1]

Born in Shanghai, Xiaoyu Weng holds a BA in Art History from the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing and a MA in Curatorial Practice from the California College of the Arts in San Francisco (2007-2009).[2]

Career

Weng was the inaugural curatorial fellow at Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts at the California College of the Arts (2009-2010)[3] and program director of the Asian Contemporary Art Consortium in San Francisco.[4]

Kadist Art Foundation, 2010–2015

Early in her career, Weng found she preferred directly talking with living artists more than art history.[5] In 2010, Weng was appointed founding director of Asia Programs at the Kadist Art Foundation's Asia Programmes for Paris and San Francisco, where she oversaw artist residencies, built the contemporary Asian art collection, and launched the Kadist Curatorial Collaboration, which organizes exhibitions designed to encourage cultural exchange.[1] Her exhibitions and programs at the Kadish often involved artist residencies and work in contemporary mediums, such as video installations, "digital literature" or installation and photography. She organized shows like Ho Tzu Nyen: The Cloud of Unknowing (2011), Ming Wong: Making Chinatown (2012), Young Hae Chang Heavy Industries: Pacific Limm (2013), Robert Zhao Renhui: Flies Prefer Yellow (2014).[1] Weng has said that working at the Kadist developed her interest in artistic practice and culture in Southeast Asia. It gave her the "opportunity to come to Singapore for research trips and truly understand the scene".[6]

While at the Kadist, Weng also participated in shows for other institutions such as the Invisible Hand: Curating as Gesture, the second CAFAM International Biennial in 2014 at the Central Academy of Fine Arts Museum, Beijing for which she was one of the co-curators. She was also a co-curator of the exhibition Landscape: the virtual, the actual, the possible? (the show’s title refers to Félix Guattari's "four ontological functors") for the Guangdong Times Museum in Guangzhou and the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San Francisco in 2014.[4][7]

Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 2015–2021

In 2015, Weng was appointed The Robert H.N. Ho Family Foundation Associate Curator at The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York where she curated the exhibitions Tales of Our Time (2016), which commissioned new works by nine artists born in mainland China, Hong Kong, or Taiwan[1][5] and One Hand Clapping (2018), featuring newly commissioned artworks by five artists and artist collectives from artists born in Greater China, including Cao Fei and Samson Young.[4][8][9]

In 2015, Weng curated Soft Crash, a homage to J. G. Ballard, held at Galleria d'Arte Moderna e Contemporanea in Bergamo, Italy. From 2018 to 2019, she served as the curator of the 5th Ural Industrial Biennial of Contemporary Art held in Yekaterinburg, Russia, transforming a former military factory and an abandoned theater into contemporary art spaces. In 2019, she curated Neither Black / Red / Yellow Nor Woman about three women who search for their voices as artists, held at the Times Art Center Berlin, Germany and in 2021, Miriam Cahn and Claudia Martínez Garay: Ten Thousand Things in which both artists evoked in their work shared experiences as women and as witnesses to their generations, held at the Sifang Art Museum, Nanjing, China.[4]

In March 2021, Weng began a new appointment to the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto as the lead curator and head of modern and contemporary art.[10] That April her last project at the Guggenheim Christian Nyampeta: Sometimes It Was Beautiful opened in the rotunda of the Museum, involving film, audio, videos, and drawings.[11] Weng only remained in the position for two years, an unusually short period for such a high-profile position.[12]

In 2025, Naomi Beckwith appointed Weng to her artistic team for the 2027 edition of Documenta alongside Carla Acevedo‑Yates, Romi Crawford, Mayra A. Rodríguez Castro.[13][14]

Other activities

Weng has taught at New York University, CCS Bard College, and the School of Visual Arts, New York.[15]

Weng was part of the jury that selected Stephanie Dinkins for the 2023 LG Guggenheim Award, an international art prize established as part of a long-term global partnership between LG Group and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum to recognize groundbreaking artists in technology-based art.[16]

Publications

Honours

References

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