When scientific information such as place and date, genus and species, or climate and temperature are recorded alongside haiku it will be easier for future generations to understand the changes in the complexity of the natural world and its relation to culture. Some haikuists report that their morning routines include checking not only the weather forecasts but also information about radiological dosage in the air, the diffusion of PM 2.5, yellow dust and cedar pollen.”
From Climate Change is Changing Haiku by David McMurray
Wrong Season functions as a mise-en-scène for a fictional season. Moving beyond traditional, romanticized notions of the four seaons, the exhibition envisions a poetics of weather that places humans as integral to nature, while also attuning to the subtler rhythms and changes of the world. Ko Sin Tung obscures the window view by transferring the shedded, top layer of the walls – situated alongside fragments of a scaffolding structure.
— Courtesy of PINK SNOW