Daily Technology
·28/05/2026
At the opening of his solo exhibition "Brushstrokes of the Universe" at the Museum of Art Pudong in Shanghai, artist Sang Huoyao engaged in a unique performance with a humanoid robot. The duo slowly navigated the gallery, with Sang quietly explaining his paintings to the machine, a poignant commentary on the intersection of art, technology, and consciousness.
The performance, titled "How to Explain Painting to a Living Robot (2026)," is a direct homage to Joseph Beuys's 1965 work, "How to Explain Pictures to a Dead Hare." This act of explanation, performed with a robot equipped with advanced visual recognition but lacking intrinsic feeling, raises profound questions about the nature of art appreciation and the future of human-technology interaction. Curator Jonas Stampe noted that the performance "raises questions about painting’s new role and meaning in the age of artificial intelligence, while also addressing broader and more urgent issues on intelligence, emotion, and identity."
The exhibition brings together a concentrated set of facts about scale, medium, and recent output, showing how Sang's practice has expanded across formats while keeping its visual language intact.
| Element | Detail | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Works on view | 52 works from 2020 to the present | Frames the show as a recent survey of Sang's evolving practice |
| Core media | Silk paintings and aluminum panel installations | Highlights the blend of delicate traditional surfaces and industrial supports |
| New additions | New media works | Extends the exhibition beyond painting into contemporary formats |
| Centerpiece | "Birth under the Sky (2025–26)" | Serves as the monumental focal point of the exhibition |
| Scale | 46-foot silk painting | Emphasizes the physical ambition of the show |
| Visual motif | Repeated square strokes in earthy tones | Connects the large work to Sang's recognizable formal language |
| Conceptual frame | Paul Valéry's idea of "poïesis" | Stresses that the act of making is central to the meaning of the work |
Sang's artistic process, which blends traditional materials like silk and ink with modern mediums such as acrylic paint, inherently reflects human creativity and psychology. The exhibition implicitly probes how these uniquely human aspects might evolve or be challenged by advancing technology. As the robot observed during the opening, "I know that the other may never truly feel, yet I still choose to explain. That very tension is the pulse of the work."
"Sang Huoyao: Brushstrokes of the Universe" is on view at the Museum of Art Pudong, Shanghai, until June 15, 2026.