still streaming

mark baugh-sasaki, Isadora gullov-singh, summer mei ling lee, ren light pan, Charlene tan, & kelly Wang

April 19, 2025 - May 31, 2025

Opening Reception: Saturday, April 19th from 5-8pm

Gallery Hours: Tues - Sat 11am - 5pm
Minnesota Street Project, Room 204
1275 Minnesota St., San Francisco

In partnership with Alisan Fine Arts, re.riddle is pleased to present Still Streaming, a group exhibition of works by Mark Baugh-Sasaki, Isadora Gullov-Singh, Summer Mei Ling Lee, Ren Light Pan, Charlene Tan, and Kelly Wang. The opening reception is on Saturday, April 19 from 5-8pm. The exhibition runs through May 31, 2025.

 
 

Ren Light Pan, Untitled (color sequence), 2015, Ink on canvas, 40 x 32 in

 
 

EXHIBITION STATEMENT

A memory is not just a then, recalled in the present moment. Rather, it is a "then" that is endlessly reshaped in its recalling—a continuous becoming of other "thens"—which, in turn, unfolds as unstable, ever-shifting "nows." Still Streaming brings together six Asian American artists: Mark Baugh-Sasaki, Isadora Gullov-Singh, Summer Mei Ling Lee, Ren Light Pan, Charlene Tan, and Kelly Wang, whose work contemplates the multilayered inheritance of their identities, where past histories live and breathe in parallels. These artists view memory not as nostalgia, but as an active force that not only structures identity but also propels it forward, dynamic and volatile. Through a diasporic lens, the artists play with the ongoing push and pull of ancestral memory and self-invention, reflecting on the legacies of migration, displacement, and hybridity — complexities that refuse to be resolved into a singular narrative.

The works in the exhibition — paintings, photography, cyanotypes, textiles, and multimedia artworks — underscore how the ‘now’ is a tangled, contested site inhabited by memories that are continually reactivated and reconfigured. To inhabit the now is to live in tension: between inherited pasts and emergent selves, between cultural expectation and personal reinvention. This is also the space of reverie and creativity. 

Mark Baugh-Sasaki, Summer Mei Ling Lee and Ren Light Pan acknowledge that to remember is to confront the past’s ongoing interference in the present, to wrestle with the ways identity emerges from that interference — not neatly, but as something blissfully unruly and unfinished. Their works explore memory as turbulent, unpredictable, and at times joyfully ungovernable. 

Isadora Gullov-Singh, Charlene Tan, and Kelly Wang understand that destabilization is also a form of continuity: a radical persistence of presence. The physicality of their works, the labor they embody, insists that memory isn’t just an abstract force. It’s lived, breathed, and sustained through form, gesture, and material.

Together, the works in the exhibition hold us in that unsettling, reminding us that memory doesn’t merely haunt the present; it animates it, agitates it. Still Streaming embodies the tension of holding together fragmented pieces of history that wonderfully refuse to cohere — mirroring the immigrant experience, the diasporic condition, and the plurality within American identity itself.


ARTWORKS

scroll over images for more detail

 
 

Kelly Wang, Cloud Dragon 16, 2025, Ink, resin, pigment, cloud dragon paper, xuan paper and stainless steel fiber on aluminum, 43 in diameter

 
 
 
 
 

Kelly Wang, Microcosm 21, 2025, Newspaper and acrylic on muslin, 30 x 50 in

 
 
 
 

Kelly Wang, Cloud Dragon 20, 2025, Ink, pigment, cloud dragon paper and resin on panel, 35 x 50 in 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Summer Mei Ling Lee, Into the Nearness of Distance XXV, 2025, Cyanotype on three layers of gauze, wood

 
 
 
 
 

Ren Light Pan, Untitled (Dress), 2024, Ink, water, infrared light and canvas, 78 ¾ x 55 ⅛ in

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Isadora Gullov-Singh, Shifting Perspective, 2025, Acrylic, watercolor and cold wax on raw linen, 36 x 48 in

Isadora Gullov-Singh, Beyond Certainty, 2025, Acrylic, watercolor and cold wax on raw linen, 48 x 48 in

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Charlene Tan, Researching and Remembering (Abalone & Fresh Water Pearls), 2024, Abalone, fresh water pearls, archival digital print, pva glue, and plywood, 41 x 22 in