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at the end of the sentence, it rotted

When language includes and excludes depending on who does and who does not speak, at the end of the sentence, it rotted is a transforming sound installation that reflects upon the diasporic conditions of language. 

Looking upon a history of constructed languages, the installation consists of  abstractions of writing systems that together with sound are constantly transformed and turned into decay, as water is pumped in and reverses after 8 hours.  

As an outsider of a language, any written or spoken words are purely strokes and  phonetics; an asemic relation, when you are unable to grasp the meaning of words. Through bio-asemic rust and decay, at the end of the sentence, it rotted searches for a language that includes all. It’s a return to a time of pre-linguistics, where sound and touch are prominent. To return to a time before words became the dominant way of  communicating. 

 

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Cecilie Fang is an anti-disciplinary artist and writer from China and Denmark currently  based in The Hague. Her work is a continuous auto-ethnographic research, in which she  researches power structures through and with language. She is interested in the diasporic conditions of language and what power lies behind literacy and the unableness to speak. Through microperformances of materials and their organic  processes, she meditates on alternative ways of languaging (looking upon meaning  production as not fixed, but open-ended and process-oriented) and aims to create work  exploring speculative linguistic ecosystems.