DAISHI LUO

The Antidote
18 April - 07 June, 2026
A4 Art Museum, Cheng Du
The Antidote:
Copper, Nature & Technological Symbiosis
Dates
18 April - 7 June 2026
Location
3F Exhibition Hall, A4 Art Museum (Luxetown Mountain-top Plaza)
The exhibition showcases Daishi Luo’s long-term interdisciplinary research and artistic practice centered on copper. Marking her first solo exhibition in a museum, The Antidote brings together ten bodies of work that respond to the conditions of the present: amid continuous technological advancement and ongoing social transformation, how can individuals re-examine their relationship with nature and technology under uncertainty, and explore possible mechanisms of synergy and balance among them? Copper, as a material that runs through human civilization, technological development, and the natural world, functions not only as a key component in infrastructure but also carries cultural and ecological attributes. Luo transforms it into a medium that connects nature, technology, and society. For much of modern history, technology has been understood as a tool for controlling nature. From the Industrial Revolution to the digital age, human beings have extended their capacity to intervene in the world through machines, materials, and systems. Yet as ecological crisis, artificial intelligence, and biotechnology accelerate simultaneously, the limits of this one-directional logic of control become increasingly apparent. Technology is no longer merely an instrument of human will, and nature can no longer be treated as a passive resource. What emerges instead is a field of complex relations shaped by interdependence, feedback, and uncertainty. It is within this context that The Antidote adopts healing as a clinical metaphor. Rather than proposing a final solution, the exhibition asks what kind of material foundations “progress” is built upon, and what forms of exhaustion, imbalance, and anxiety accompany technological expansion. Copper, the exhibition’s foundational material, runs through human civilization, technological development, and the natural world. It is both a crucial component of infrastructure and a material that changes with time: it oxidises, discolours, and reacts, continuously recording environmental conditions and material shifts. Since 2015, Daishi Luo has developed a long-term practice around copper through field research, material experimentation, and interdisciplinary investigation. Beginning with her study of copper’s chromatic transformations in industrial design and jewellery, she later travelled to traditional craft workshops in places such as Luoyang, Baoji, Suzhou, and Tongling, tracing vernacular knowledge of how copper can be transformed through local materials and natural agents. These investigations led her to understand copper not as a fixed object, but as a living medium capable of collaborating with natural forces. Over time, Luo developed a working method that brings copper into contact with plant extracts, mineral reactions, seawater, soil, weaving, ceramics, and other craft-based techniques. Drawing from Chinese medicine, material science, chemistry, and biology, she has built a growing archive of copper colour cultivation systems. Since 2018, she has systematically documented these experiments through what she calls “controlled out-of-controlness”: a process in which precise conditions are maintained while the irreproducible elements of time, temperature, humidity, and environmental response are deliberately preserved. To date, this system has generated 528 colour and texture variations, forming the basis of her evolving material language. Within this framework, industrial copper waste is no longer treated simply as a resource to be consumed or discarded. Instead, it re-enters cycles of transformation through the participation of nature and time, producing new colours, crystals, and structures. From colour-skin to crystal-skeleton, Luo’s practice explores how matter can grow across the threshold between surface and structure, image and object, control and emergence. Craft, in this context, is not decorative; it restores human scale to the laboratory and allows nature, people, and technology to function within the same collaborative network. The exhibition unfolds across six spatial chapters and ten new bodies of work. At the entrance, The Network Gate turns copper shielding mesh into a passable threshold. What is next? expands into a ten-metre-long sculptural question about extraction and future possibility. Transformer Lab becomes an active cultivation site where copper, plants, minerals, seawater, and soil generate coloured forms over time. Copper Color Gene Bank systematises these outcomes into an evolving archive of chromatic knowledge. SEED compresses the temporal logic of growth into visible rhythm, while Super Composite Being reanimates technological waste into new hybrid life forms. Mirror of Time-Space, Connection, and Searching for the Antidote return the viewer to the body and to the question of how relations might be rebuilt between human beings, materials, and the systems they inhabit. Ultimately, The Antidote does not seek to establish a new regime of control. Instead, it proposes another possibility: that within increasingly complex systems, human beings may no longer be masters, but participants, mediators, and collaborators. What is being sought is not a final answer, but a new relational structure connecting human beings, nature, technology, and the future.
Installation Views
Featured Works
Daishi Luo transforms A4 Art Museum into a super-alchemical laboratory situated within a forest-like environment. The exhibition opens with The Network Gate and Transformer Lab, which establish its spatial and conceptual framework: one marks the threshold into the system, while the other activates a field of cultivation. Together, they frame copper as both the infrastructure that underpins the technological world and a medium through which nature and material processes generate new forms of life. The exhibition evokes alchemy, ecology, excavation, and the laboratory, opening a world of relation and transformation.
THE NETWORK GATE

THE NETWORK GATE, 2026
Material: Copper shielding mesh
Dimensions: 220 X 250 cm
Threshold
Drawing on the logic of a Faraday cage, The Network Gate uses copper shielding mesh—an industrial material designed to block signals and contain interference. When enclosed into a sealed space, it can prevent electric fields and electromagnetic waves from passing through. Daishi tears open this layer of mesh, normally hidden within everyday infrastructure and serving functions of protection and isolation, into a traversable gateway, inviting viewers to enter the exhibition. In the artist’s view, the work points not only to technological and informational networks, but also to larger structures woven by resources, desire, and control.


TRANSFORMER LAB

Transformer Lab, 2026
Material: Industrial copper plates, discarded wires, various plants, minerals, soil, seawater, laboratory glassware, petri dishes, lenses, stainless steel with white spray paint
Dimensions: Approx. 550 L × 480 W × 420 H cm
Centre
This is the core laboratory of the exhibition, where copper meets plants, minerals, seawater, soil, and craft-based processes. Through controlled conditions and partial unpredictability, industrial copper plates are pushed into a state of guided growth.
Red soil and stones from Yunnan, shenjincao from Guizhou, Phellodendron bark and gardenia from Sichuan, as well as wood ash and seawater, are processed into solutions of varying acidity and alkalinity. These are placed into raindrop-shaped glass vessels and drip onto industrial copper plates predesigned with reaction growth paths. Under the combined effects of time, air, humidity, and temperature, different colors and crystalline structures gradually form on the surface of the copper plates. Lenses on the circular column displays magnify these subtle transformations, revealing states reminiscent of a cosmic star field. Daishi refers to this collaborative method with nature as “uncontrollability within control”—retaining a degree of uncertainty within a highly determined framework in order to seek a dynamic balance.
In this work, the solutions reacting with copper are extracted from various plants, many of which are also used in traditional Chinese medicine. Daishi considers traditional Chinese medicine—long used to treat both physical and psychological conditions—as a metaphor for addressing the anxieties of the technological age: could collaboration with nature itself be seen as an antidote to the anxiety brought about by the rapid acceleration of technology?







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COPPER COLORS

COPPER COLORS 2016 - Ongoing
Material: Industrial copper plates, brass plates, various natural reactive materials, oxides, guided-growth colors, petri dishes, book
Dimensions: Variable installation
Archive
The Copper Colors is a continuously growing system and a central outcome of Luo’s long-term research into collaboration between humans and nature. Since 2016, the project has expanded through the use of industrial red copper plates and brass plates as a “canvas,” drawing on the logic of Chinese bronze patination and combining it with techniques from dyeing, chemistry and biology to generate hundreds of distinct chromatic formations and growth outcomes. It is both a continuation of Transformer Lab and the intellectual foundation that feeds the broader practice. Copper is no longer treated merely as a material; instead, it becomes part of nature itself—an active medium capable of recording time, environment and relations of collaboration. The system has generated 528 methods and programs for colour production, which can be dismantled and recombined like atoms to form an expanding chromatic universe. The exhibition presents 147 works from this system, alongside stages of its ongoing research.



COPPER COLORS VOL.01, 2020
Book
This publication systematically gathers the research trajectory, conceptual framework and experimental process of the Copper Color Gene Bank, while also presenting the fieldwork conducted in 42 craft workshops. It is both an extension of the exhibition’s documentary materials and a methodological archive of the project. By placing experimental notes, research ideas and craft observations side by side, the book transforms knowledge that once circulated between studio and field into a system that can be read, cited and further developed. The book continues to be updated.

Research and practice
Copper Colors is grounded in Luo’s long-term field research and material experimentation. Over the years, she has visited 42 representative traditional bronze workshops across five regions in China, studying how local artisans work with region-specific materials, natural resources, and manual techniques to produce copper colour and imitation patina. In Henan, for example, artisans use soil-burial methods to create aged bronze effects; in Yunnan, local minerals are used to produce variegated 斑铜 textures; and in Suzhou, craftsmen are known for refining and working with multiple copper alloys.
Through this in situ approach, Luo seeks to understand how different regional practices embody a philosophy of working with nature, and how this logic can be translated into her own artistic practice. Building on these investigations, the artist has developed a methodology that brings together natural dyeing, bio-based colour processes, and chemical reactions. Over the past decade, she has worked with materials such as seawater, rainwater, hair, and Chinese medicinal herbs, using them to develop what she calls a practice of “controlled out-of-controlness.” In this sense, Copper Colors is a growing system shaped by the studio, the field, and nature, with each site contributing to an ongoing process of accumulation across time.
What appears as a colour is, in fact, the visible outcome of many crystals and oxidised compounds. Colour is only the first language of the work; what interests Luo more deeply is the equation behind each colour formation. These equations form the structural basis of the system: they allow each colour to be repeated, yet remain unique through the irreproducible agency of natural forces. In this way, Copper Colours is not a static archive of samples, but an evolving research system in which each colour can be broken apart, recombined, and extended into new visual languages.
Conduct experiments using hair and rainwater in nature, from Metamorphosis, 2024

Field study at the Dongchuan Copper Mine in Yunnan, 2024


Elsholtzia loeseneri Hand.-Mazz. in Dongchuan, 2024
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SEEDS

Video excerpt_SEED II, 2016 - Ongoing
Single-channel color video with sound, 1'33"
Guided growth
SEED records the guided-growth of copper colour and crystal formations through microscopic and time-lapse photography. Filmed over two months and comprising more than 10,000 images, the footage is accelerated in post-production to reveal a temporal structure of continuous change under varying conditions. The work compresses a slow and almost imperceptible process of growth into a visible rhythm, allowing viewers to witness—in just over one minute—how material generates itself through time.

SUPER COMPOSITE BEING


Symbiosis or strangulation?
Daishi collects discarded data cables from recycling stations and second-hand platforms, removes their outer layers, and extracts the inner copper wires, which are then wrapped around shells and leaves. These assemblages are placed into a solution of blue vitriol (copper sulfate), a traditional Chinese medicinal ingredient, and grown under guided conditions, synthesizing minerals, plants, and organic matter into a “super composite being.”
In her view, as technological development deepens dependence on electricity, data transmission, and network connectivity, cables have become the “lifelines” of modern life. Yet once they fail, are damaged, and discarded, they also begin to participate in environmental issues in another way. Does technological acceleration strangle nature, or does it give rise to new forms of symbiosis?
Super Composite Being, 2026
Material: Discarded wires , leaves, shells, guided-growth sculpture, copper sulfate solution, glass culture tubes, light, cork stoppers
Dimensions: 10×10×100cm, ×3 pieces


Discarded cable, Process of Guided- growth, 2026

Discarded cable, Process of Guided- growth, 2026

MIRROR OF TIME SPACE

Mirror of Time-Space, 2026
Material: copper shielding mesh, guided-growth crystals, stainless steel
Dimensions: 45×25×100cm
Human
Based on copper shielding mesh, this work is shaped and then placed into a solution of blue vitriol (copper sulfate) for two months of guided growth, ultimately forming a black, sharp, and aesthetically striking crystalline mirror surface. In the form of a “mirror,” the work incorporates the viewer: when one stands before it, their image is drawn into the material surface, becoming part of the work.
For Daishi, this reflects the relationship between the self and systems, and serves as a reminder that humans, as part of nature, are simultaneously creating, expanding, and suppressing the world while also placing themselves within the same structure of risk.

Process of Guided- growth, 2026



CONNECTION

Connection, 2026
Material: copper wires from discarded data cables, ceramics, copper pipes, guided-growth crystals
Dimensions: Variable dimensions
The collision between humanity, nature, and technology
Ceramics are among the most recognisable forms of craft, instantly associated with the handmade and the human touch. In this work, Luo takes the broken ceramic vessel as a form that symbolises humanity—fragile, incomplete, and marked by imperfection. She then reconnects these fragments with copper wire extracted from discarded data cables, weaving them together in a gold-mesh structure before placing them into a copper sulfate solution for guided growth. Over the course of a month, and through the combined action of time, electricity, and natural matter, the work gradually transforms into a new composite body in which human, nature, and technology are brought into relation.
Installed within Luo’s “Blue Window Reactor,” the work makes visible the otherwise invisible networks that saturate everyday life. By re-establishing relationships between human-made, natural, and industrial materials, it reorganises them into a tangible life structure.




SEARCHING FOR THE ANTIDOTE

Searching for the Antidote, 2026
Material: video, guided-growth sculptures, cables, glass
Dimensions: 900 x 900 x 900 cm
Searching
The work unfolds within a darkened space scattered with discarded copper cables. In the video installation, the artist uses her own body as a medium, attempting to untangle herself from the restraints and pressures imposed by the cables. At the same time, the cables extend beyond the screen into the physical space, connecting to a square glass cultivation vessel with a fractured top. Inside, a hand slowly grows upward, reaching and searching, forming an open-ended image still in the process of becoming—one that seeks to break through constraints and imagine alternative futures.
For Luo, this work reflects the condition of contemporary life. As technology and artificial intelligence become increasingly embedded in everyday existence, human beings find themselves entangled within invisible networks that are difficult to escape. Anxiety, uncertainty, confusion, and pressure coexist within a state of continuous turbulence. Yet alongside these conditions, new possibilities are also emerging. Between industrial civilisation, ecological systems, and the human body, the work suggests that another form of composite ecology—and perhaps another future relationship—is already taking shape.



Video excerpt_Searching for the Antidote, 2026
Single-channel color video with sound, 26:32

WHAT IS NEXT ?

WHAT IS NEXT?, 2026
Material: Discarded copper wires, copper pipes, guided-growth crystals, cultivation tank, PVC pipes
Dimensions: 865×180×105 cm
What is next?
A nearly ten-metre-long “giant cable” cuts through the space. Copper pipes originally used in industrial air-conditioning systems appear to burst from the reinforced concrete wall, extending like vines before crystallising into the words: WHAT IS NEXT?
Positioned at both the beginning and the end of the exhibition journey, the work functions as a return point. After moving through spaces of cultivation, transformation, symbiosis, conflict, and self-reflection, viewers arrive not at a conclusion, but at an open question.
Within the sculpture, industrial copper tubing and guided crystal growth coexist as two temporal states of the same material. One speaks of extraction, production, infrastructure, and technological expansion; the other of geological time, natural processes, and material self-organisation. The work moves continuously between these conditions, dissolving any clear boundary between the artificial and the natural, growth and consumption, future and origin.
By compressing the cycles of industrial production, resource extraction, and crystal growth into a single gesture, What is next? becomes less a statement than an invitation. Faced with accelerating technological development, ecological uncertainty, and an increasingly interconnected world, the work asks a question that remains unresolved: What kind of future are we building, and where do we go from here?






Credits
A4 Art Museum
Acknowledgements
Production Support: Tan Zhipeng, Studio MánMán
Video Production: Tian Tu Photoqraphy Studio
TV Support: Banmu Fangzhai Home Furnishing Full-Solution Center
Special Thanks to: Tan Zhipeng, Duan Shengfeng, Camille Gasser, Matthieu Pajot, Lisa Gisselbrecht, Thomas Oliver Pryce, Li Xin, Guo Hailong, Chen Cai, A Min, Liu Limei
Exhibition Team
Curator: Yang Yuting
Exhibition Coordinator: Yang Yuting
Visual Design: He Yanming, You Yi(Intern)
Brand Promotion: Zhang Haoyue, Zhou Yijia, Ruan Feng
Operations Support: Yang Siying, Zhao Zijun, Ye Zimeng, Li Shiqi
Exhibition Support: Geng Mengze, Tang Wanke (Intern)
Exhibition Construction: Chengdu Tuoyue Culture Communication Co., Ltd.
Security and Sanitation: Jiang Zhibo, Wang Hongyu, Chen Nan, Liu Huaying, Shu Decheng, Yuan Xiaohong, Huang Yueqiu, Song Shiqiong, Ye Huirong
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