AGORA is pleased to present Sip from the Skull: Chapter I at Tipsy Shanghai 6, a Chinatown restaurant managed by Owen Yang. Chapter I is a group exhibition featuring works by Billy Chen, Jeewon Kim, Kaming Lee, Sidian Liu, Yiwei Lu, Eiko Nishida, Kai Oh, Tianran Qian, Albert Samreth, Junyi Shi, Qiaosen
Yang, V Yeh, and Rachel Youn.
Curated by Dylan Seh-Jin Kim and sskm, Sip from the Skull is an exhibition series
organized into “Chapters” that will travel across venues in New York City. The project’s title is inspired by
Korean folklore about the 7th-century Buddhist monk Wonhyo. According to folklore, Wonhyo sets out on
a journey across Asia to gain Enlightenment. Suddenly caught in a rainstorm, Wonhyo is forced to seek
shelter in a nearby cave. During the night, the thirsty Wonhyo reaches around for refreshment, and to his
delight, finds a bowl of sweet and fresh water with which he quenches his thirst. To his dismay, he finds in
the morning that the bowl of water isn’t how he imagined it. Instead, the bowl was a skull; the water was
rotten and spoiled. From this, Wonhyo gains Enlightenment that our perception of ‘reality’ depends on our
mind and its desires—it is what the mind presents to us, not how it objectively is. No longer feeling the need to travel, Wonhyo returns home to share his findings.
Sip from the Skull explores different stages of Wonhyo’s journey as a thematic guide. The exhibition
series brings together artists who engage with questions about the systems through which we create,
assemble, and present objects. By inviting participants to experience the exhibition of works in spaces
atypical to art exhibitions, Sip from the Skull centers the social dimension at the forefront, determined by the art, artists, and communities that choose to engage.
Sip from the Skull : Chapter I marks the start of this series at Tipsy Shanghai 6. Owen Yang runs his Mott Street restaurant in
an experimental fashion: a “currently chaotic” balance of work, life, and sleep. The ecosystem of hungry customers, local residents, curious tourists, art appreciators, and passersby that flow through his
restaurant, located in the heart of Chinatown, will activate the artworks.
“I don’t have a grand plan. I’m here to mingle with the community around Chinatown. I think running a
small restaurant in Chinatown is an intensely authentic experience, or what some may call a ‘typical immigrant hustle.’ I find the Chinatown community fascinating as it still stands fiercely against the eventually unavoidable gentrification process. Unlike its more altered and modernized neighboring districts, it remains a fortress, a living cultural tapestry that I am privileged to be a part of. And I invite you
all to come share this privilege.”
- Owen Yang
PARTNERS