Minor Attractions (Fair)

Minor Attractions (Fair) from LUmkA


Mandrake Hotel, London, United Kingdom
Oct 14 - 18, 2025

LUmkA is pleased to present selected works by gallery artists Ruby Chen and Miles Scharff.

Chen, informed by evolutionary cosmologies and cybernetic theory, stages a bifurcated tableau: a lone figure gazing upon a passenger-less motorcycle. The juxtaposing images crystallize the estrangement between the body and the machine, illustrating how power and agency migrate seamlessly from the corporeal form to the apparatus. Chen’s work raises the question of whether technology remains a prosthetic extension of the mortal form or, having crossed an ontological threshold, now operates independently under its own autonomous desire.

Scharff, a sound artist with an education in physics, invents, records, and stages interactions between tangible objects and intangible signals. In his latest work, footage of a UFO plays across a screen while a field of steel dust—animated by magnetism—traces its movement. The artist’s apparatus converts invisible force into visible index, re-encoding perception through delay and distortion. Magnetism functions here as both medium and interference, an unseen pressure that reveals even as it conceals. The UFO emerges less as a stable image than as a site of mediation, oscillating between presence and concealment, shaped not by what it is but by the forces that render it perceptible. The work ultimately asks what it means to see when every act of seeing is already conditioned by what cannot be seen itself.

Through Chen’s tensile imagery and Scharff’s translated vibrations, both artists anthropomorphize technology and technologize the body, revealing the boundary between human and machine as a permeable, shifting membrane.

Ruby Chen (B. 2001)

Chen is a multidisciplinary artist working primarily in sculpture and painting. Drawing from psychoanalysis and cultural and economic theory, the artist examines how primal human compulsions - particularly those shaped by technology, consumption, and power - repeat themselves across historical and contemporary contexts. Chen’s academic background in social policy informs a materially driven practice that foregrounds the body as a site of both control and resistance. The artist’s works frequently incorporate humanoid materials such as animal fur, skin-textured rubber, synthetic hair, and industrial metal fixtures. These material juxtapositions generate visceral bodily responses and articulate the artist’s exploration of the unconscious and its entanglement with technological acceleration.

Chen’s work has recently been exhibited internationally by New Art Dealers Alliance (NADA), NYC, LUmkA, London, and Alexia Project, Shanghai. The artist’s works have been featured in publications such as Flash Art, Elephant Art Magazine, Office Magazine, IMPULSE Magazine, and Hypebae, among others.

Miles Scharff (B. 1999)

A sound artist and improviser working with radio electronics, sound sculpture, video, spatial audio, and performance. His current research explores how everyday objects double as involuntary antennas, absorbing and re-broadcasting stray electromagnetic and acoustic signals. Spawned by telecom and other industrial systems, these accidental relay points become unlikely portals for intimate acts of listening. Scharff sees them as case studies along a continuum that stretches from the epistemic rigor of Western science to its détournement by conspiratorial and fringe-spiritualist cultures. He builds devices and software that stage, record, and recontextualize these object–signal interactions, transducing latent fields into audible and kinetic forms; granting physical presence to phenomena that usually escape perception, situating them in relation to our bodies, architectures, and ecologies. His aim is not to affix a definitive truth, but to materialize the unseen so that it can be examined—critically and sensorially—within the complex infrastructures that shape contemporary experience.

Minor Attractions (Fair)

Works

Paradise Lost
Ruby Chen, Paradise Lost, 2025

Oil on canvas

31.5 x 78.7 in

80 x 200 cm

Looking Machine
Miles Scharff, Looking Machine, 2025

Steel, roller chain, sprockets, neo-dymium magnet, machine screws,stepper motors, chromebook screen, acrylic