Zadie Xa in front of her 2022 artwork Homecoming.
Photo: ARTIFACTS, COURTESY OF THADDAEUS ROPAC GALLERY

Zadie Xa Conjures Fantastical Dreamscapes with Her Immersive Works of Art

The East London based artist’s debut at Thaddaeus Ropac gallery in Paris reimagines shape-shifting characters and appearance-altering costumes

“There is something about fantasy and total world environments that I’m very drawn to,” says Zadie Xa, whose multidisciplinary practice spans painting, sculpture, sound, and performance. Born in Vancouver, British Columbia, and now based in East London, she creates captivating installations and experiences that are imbued with magic and spirituality that have caught the attention of the art world. At the 2019 Venice Biennale, her performance Grandmother Mago referenced the shamanistic creator goddess of Korean mythology and combined intricate folk-inspired costumes and orca masks with drumming and dance.

An installation view of Xa’s “Nine Tailed Tall Tales: Trickster, Mongrel, Beast” (2023) at Space K in Seoul, South Korea. Photo: COURTESY OF SPACE K SEOUL

Her London show at Whitechapel Gallery in 2022, meanwhile, titled “House Gods, Animal Guides and Five Ways 2 Forgiveness,” centered on a patchwork fabric structure inspired by the traditional Korean home, called a hanok. Inside was a series of Xa’s otherworldly textiles and paintings—colorful dreamscapes in which humans and animals coexist. “I’m very interested in how people have used animals within the semiotic universe,” says Xa.

Installation images of "Myths of Our Time" 2023, Seoul, Korea. Photo: Courtesy Thaddaeus Ropac gallery, London, Paris, Salzburg, Seoul

Her imagery often features shape-shifter or trickster characters—“something that’s able to change its form to either look human or to deceive whoever it’s talking to,” she explains. For her debut at Thaddaeus Ropac gallery in Paris, on display through May 26, a focus is the nine-tailed fox spirit that appears in different Asian stories. “It will often disguise itself as an attractive young woman to seduce men, then consume their intestines in order to either live longer, gain wisdom, or ultimately become a human itself,” she says. 

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Installation images of "House Gods, Animal Guides and Five Ways 2 Forgiveness" 2022 curated by Tarini Malik and Inês Costa. at Whitechapel Gallery. Photo: Andy Keate

These works will also incorporate elements of costume making and examine how clothes play a role in creating—and sometimes altering—one’s identity, says Xa, who plans all of her exhibitions “as if it’s one work,” collaborating at every stage with her husband, fellow artist Benito Mayor Vallejo. “He gives a lot of feedback and inserts a lot of his own ideas,” she says. “It’s a real team effort.”

A version of this article first appeared in print in our 2024 Spring Issue under the headline “Personal Vision.” Subscribe to the magazine.

Cover: Zadie Xa in front of her 2022 artwork Homecoming.
Photo: ARTIFACTS, COURTESY OF THADDAEUS ROPAC GALLERY

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