Innumerable Fires by Yeni Mao problematizes notions of danger and safety in relation to the architectures we inhabit, be that public or private spaces. On a physical and symbolic level, the first is usually conceptualized in relation to threat and the second to protection. In contrast, Mao rearticulates the various dynamic interactions that constitute both spaces and the bodies that occupy them. The exhibition’s title alludes to the material interrelations of the human (body and soul) with the mineral and natural world, and can also be read in relation to the diverse forms fire can take: as the center of domestic warmth, combustion when interacting with other materials, or the state of physical change that its presence implies. The latter is one of the main concerns in the artist’s practice, seen as a passage from one state, concept or space, to another.


All the works on the show were created by way of antagonistic processes and an unexpected mixture of materials. Sustained in a semi-figurative and semi-abstract latency, they allow for a constant reconfiguration. The wood structure can be seen as a membrane that unites these spaces through division, and yet also encloses one place within another place (the gallery). Mao employs this structure, the cave or first shelter, to imply protection over the fragility of human bodies, and as an “opulent box” where our precious objects and memories are stored. Inspired by the artist's own studio, this installation keeps and displays various pieces that allude to human, animal, vegetable or mineral bodies that interact with each other through a translucent and minimal aesthetic.

  • The artist's process sits at the intersection of various historical and scientific references, as well as rational and meditative states, an encounter between the industrial and the artisanal, the machine and the hand. Making different worlds converge also translates onto the collapse of time, creating a kind of future past that redeploys elements from tribal traditions and countercultures to articulate a flexible and ever-changing configuration of identities. Yeni Mao's works and installations pursue the creation of his own material and discursive present, far from the hegemonic narratives that tend to dominate our lives and bodies. Both his condition of cultural and territorial displacement, as well as his dispossession of heteronormativity, have forced and encouraged the artist to pursue a type of self-construction that explores his own history and current place in the world. The artist’s idea of identity and culture is not formed through nationalist impositions and the territories demarcated by the State, but rather by a collection of experiences, social interactions and decisions carried out by desire. The references to specific cultures in Mao’s practice –including narratives and events from China and Mexico, indigenous traditions, obscure queer history, and many others– appear filtered by atypical readings and mechanisms of encounter. His work then, can be read as the production of microhistories that in turn negotiate and complete the larger History. Invention is thus presented as an alternative to the reconstruction of culture and History in Yeni Mao's works, where he introduces elements from different origins within a dialogue of controlled disruption.


    The ambiguity of categorization is taken as a condition in the work of Mao, where it is proposed that our relationships with others always constitutes a risk due to difference, but they also produce a coming together and the possibility of intimacy. Yeni Mao proposes relocating the category of home and world towards a language of the present, which is desirably contaminated and plural, thus promoting a real problematization of context. 

    Text by Laura Orozco

  • fig 34.5 tidal volume, 2024 blackened and nickel-plated steel, leather 135 x 80 x 43cm (53 x 31 x 17in)

    fig 34.5 tidal volume, 2024
    blackened and nickel-plated steel, leather
    135 x 80 x 43cm (53 x 31 x 17in)

  • fig 44.1 you and me both, 2024 volcanic stone and bronze, blackened steel hardware 53 x 25 x 16cm (21...

    fig 44.1 you and me both, 2024
    volcanic stone and bronze, blackened steel hardware
    53 x 25 x 16cm (21 x 10 x 6.5in)

  • fig 44.2 you and me both, 2024 volcanic stone and bronze 60 x 24 x 19cm (23.5 x 9.5 x...

    fig 44.2 you and me both, 2024
    volcanic stone and bronze
    60 x 24 x 19cm (23.5 x 9.5 x 7.5in)

  • fig 44.4 you and me both, 2024 volcanic stone and bronze blackened steel hardware 106 x 38 x 14cm (42...

    fig 44.4 you and me both, 2024

    volcanic stone and bronze blackened steel hardware

    106 x 38 x 14cm (42 x 15 x 5,5in)

  • Exhibition view: Yeni Mao, Innumerable Fires, Campeche, Mexico City, 2024 Courtesy of the artist and Campeche, Mexico City Photography by...
    Exhibition view: Yeni Mao, Innumerable Fires, Campeche, Mexico City, 2024
    Courtesy of the artist and Campeche, Mexico City
    Photography by Ramiro Chaves @chavesdocs
  • Exhibition view: Yeni Mao, Innumerable Fires, Campeche, Mexico City, 2024 Courtesy of the artist and Campeche, Mexico City Photography by...
    Exhibition view: Yeni Mao, Innumerable Fires, Campeche, Mexico City, 2024
    Courtesy of the artist and Campeche, Mexico City
    Photography by Ramiro Chaves @chavesdocs
  • fig 36.4 skinwalker, 2024 nickel-plated steel, cobra skin 59 x 159 x 17 cm (23 1/4 x 62 5/8 x...

    fig 36.4 skinwalker, 2024

    nickel-plated steel, cobra skin

    59 x 159 x 17 cm (23 1/4 x 62 5/8 x 6 3/4 in)

  • fig 36.5 skinwalker, 2024 nickel-plated steel, cobra skin, bronze, turquoise 104 x 206 x 18cm (41 x 81 x 7in)

    fig 36.5 skinwalker, 2024
    nickel-plated steel, cobra skin, bronze, turquoise
    104 x 206 x 18cm (41 x 81 x 7in)

  • fig 36.6 skinwalker, 2024 nickel-plated steel, cobra skin, bronze, obsidian 192 x 99 x 50cm (75.5 x 39 x 19.5in)

    fig 36.6 skinwalker, 2024
    nickel-plated steel, cobra skin, bronze, obsidian
    192 x 99 x 50cm (75.5 x 39 x 19.5in)

  • fig 36.7 skinwalker, 2024 nickel-plated steel, gold plated steel, cobra skin 56 x 173 x 38cm (22 x 68 x...

    fig 36.7 skinwalker, 2024

    nickel-plated steel, gold plated steel, cobra skin

    56 x 173 x 38cm (22 x 68 x 15in)

    • fig 36.2 IVO, 2024 nickel-pated steel, porcelain, leather 122 x 19 x 13cm (48 x 7.5 x 5in)

      fig 36.2 IVO, 2024

      nickel-pated steel, porcelain, leather

      122 x 19 x 13cm (48 x 7.5 x 5in)

    • fig 36.3 IVO, 2024 nickel-pated steel, porcelain, leather 122 x 11 x 9cm (48 x 4,5 x 3.5in)

      fig 36.3 IVO, 2024
      nickel-pated steel, porcelain, leather

      122 x 11 x 9cm (48 x 4,5 x 3.5in)

  • fig 43.3 black star, 2024
    etching and aquatint with chine-collé lithograph paper dimensions
    56 x 65 cm (22 x 25 5/8 in)
    edition of 8 with two APs and one PP

  • Exhibition view: Yeni Mao, Innumerable Fires, Campeche, Mexico City, 2024 Courtesy of the artist and Campeche, Mexico City Photography by...
    Exhibition view: Yeni Mao, Innumerable Fires, Campeche, Mexico City, 2024
    Courtesy of the artist and Campeche, Mexico City
    Photography by Ramiro Chaves @chavesdocs
  • fig 45.01 hook & charms, 2024 gold-plated steel 8 x 40 cm 3 1/8 x 15 3/4 in

    fig 45.01 hook & charms, 2024
    gold-plated steel
    8 x 40 cm 3 1/8 x 15 3/4 in

  • fig 45.11 feather, 2024 ceramic and graphite 6.5 x 17 cm (2 1/2 x 6 3/4 in)

    fig 45.11 feather, 2024

    ceramic and graphite

    6.5 x 17 cm (2 1/2 x 6 3/4 in)

  • fig 45.03 metablock, 2024 wood, cement, copper, quartz, volcanic rock, steel, leather wood block 20 x 4 x 4.5cm (7.8...

    fig 45.03 metablock, 2024

    wood, cement, copper, quartz, volcanic rock, steel, leather

    wood block 20 x 4 x 4.5cm (7.8 x 1.5 x 1.7 inches)

    concrete, copper and aluminum cubes 5 x 5 x 5cm each (1.9 x 1.9 x 1.9inches)

    quartz 5 x 3 x 5cm (1.9 x 1.2 x 1.9inches)

    rock 13 x 4 x 4.5cm (5.1 x 1.5 x 1.7inches)

    cube with stick 95 x 5 x 5cm (37.4 x 1.9 x 1.9 inches)