Landing at an airport on London’s Southbank

AIRPORTS FIGURE IN many people’s lives these days. The artist Yin Xiuzhen (born 1963 in Beijing) studied art at Capital Normal University, then called Beijing Normal Academy, in Beijing from 1985 to 1989. Many of her works incorporate sewing, a skill that kept her amused as a child during Mao’s Cultural Revolution (1966-1976). “Heart to Heart” is an exhibition of her works at London’s Hayward Gallery that continues until 3 May 2026. The gallery’s website subtitles the name of her show with the words:

See the familiar in new ways, as artworks made from unconventional materials and overlooked objects reveal personal and collective stories.”

And what one sees at the exhibition confirms those words. The website also noted:

Yin Xiuzhen is renowned for her use of secondhand clothing, concrete, food and household ephemera in her immersive installations and sculptures. She creates multimedia artworks that negotiate the spaces between memories, individuals and the globalised societies that we live in today.”

One of the immersive installations on display is “International Flight”, which incorporates examples of her “Portable City” series. The Portable Cities are open suitcases in which there are models of city centres, including those of many places in China and one of London.  On entering the first gallery of the Hayward through a door marked “All flights”, one can see a model of a passenger jet plane made of cloth, suspended from the ceiling. Below it, at floor level, there is a life-size model of a baggage claim conveyor belt, on which several examples of Portable Cities are displayed. Near the conveyor belt, there are three seats of the kind usually found in the departure lounges of airports and a few baggage trolleys on whose handles are the words: “Press Down to Release the Brake”. The installation is not only visually fascinating and somewhat humorous, but also a creative portrayal of globalism.

The airport installation is only one of several highly original installations on display. The others are well-worth seeing, and if you are in London, this intriguingly original exhibition should not be missed.

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