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INSTITUTE OF VISUAL ARTS OPENS RUINS, MARCH 10
Exhibition Explores New Video and Photography from China
The Institute
of Visual Arts (Inova) at the UWM Peck School of the Arts opens
its third exhibition of the spring cycle, RUINS, on Friday,
March 10, 2006 from 6:00-9:00 pm in Gallery One, 3253 North Downer
Avenue. Guest curator Zhang Zhaohui begins a gallery talk at 6:30
pm. The opening is sponsored by the Organization of Chinese Americans-Wisconsin.
Mr. Zhang and artists Ma Yongfeng and Liu Jin will be in residence
at the Peck School of the Arts from March 6 through March 12. The
show remains open through May 14. Gallery hours are noon-5:00 pm,
Wednesday-Sunday.
RUINS, an exhibition of new video and photography from China
curated by Zhang Zhaohui, directly addresses the tension between
a rapidly developing and urbanizing
society and its traditional history and culture. This exhibition brings together
the work of fourteen artists from Mainland China and Macau: Chen Qingqing,
Chen Qiulin, the Gao Brothers, Huang Yan, Li Luming, Li Wei, Liu Jin, Liu
Wei, Ma Yongfeng, Ng Fong Chao, Sheng Qi, Xing Danwen, Zhang
Dali, and Zhang Wei.
Created with readily accessible new media, their photographic and video works
document and comment upon bewildering changes, each telling a truth about
contemporary China.
After nearly three decades of development, the Chinese contemporary
art scene has reached a new stage. Recent Chinese art is winning
international recognition and the number of gifted, self-assured
and globally conscious emerging artists has grown to a steady stream.
These younger artists have grown up in the midst of remarkable social
transitions and a remaking of the urban environment; they are also
making work in a country that is, because of its rapid and extensive
economic development, at the center of the global gaze. China’s
attitude towards its past—historical, spiritual, and material—is
also under construction, and the tension between past and present
suffuses the work of the artists whose work is included in Ruins.
Many works in the exhibition reflect the artists’ deep concern
with the uncertainty of a fast-changing society, their anxiety about
deteriorating environmental conditions, their implicit criticism
of the corrupt political system, and their aspirations for a freer
and brighter world. Their work mirrors a world defined by physical,
cultural and spiritual destruction; in it we see not only demolished
buildings but the ruins of traditional culture, patriotism, and revolutionary
ideals. Like many of China’s younger artists, the artists in
this exhibition are picking through the debris of their country’s
recent and distant past and considering the possibility of building
a new cultural identity on these ruins.
About the Artists
Chen Qingqing
Chen Qingqing (born Beijing, 1953) is one of the few Chinese artists to have
developed a methodology for creating installations combining natural and industrial
materials. Over the past ten years, she has created a large body of work by
assembling a wide variety of gadgets into enchanting surrealist spectacles.
In these landscapes, she anticipates the consequences of the deterioration
of the natural environment and expresses her fear for the world’s future
in light of its actual helplessness. Chen’s landscapes draw on recognizable
emblems of contemporary life and popular culture--scenes from Jurassic Park
and Hackers, the miniature replicas of identical tourist landscapes embedded
in everyone’s mind—suggesting that modern civilization and its
spiritual landscape are no more than a mishmash of familiar cultural fragments.
Chen Qiulin
Over the last five years Chengdu-based Chen Qiulin has created several
performance pieces in outdoor settings surrounded by demolished
towns and cities that explore the impact of urban development on
individuals. Her newest video work documents the displacement of
people whose houses were demolished and will be submerged upon
the completion of the Three Gorges Dam on the Yangtze River, the
largest reservoir and hydropower station project in the world.
From Chen’s perspective, the government’s utilitarian
pursuit of modernization is a disaster for individuals and their
environment. In One Day, a performance from 2002, the artist, dressed
as a bride, applies makeup in front of a dressing table perched
atop a ruin. The chimneys of a power station emit smoke in the
background. A young man wearing a suit throws cake at her, and
though he covers her body and face, he fails to disturb her. For
Chen, who correlates social change with individual psychological
response, the inner hurt created by a sweet life encapsulates the
experience of the One-Child generation. These lonely survivors
are fragile, weak, and vulnerable to the ruinous social environment
masked by a shallow, foppish society.
The Gao Brothers
The Gao Brothers (born Jinan, 1956 and 1962) began making work in
the mid-1980s and are among the first generation of China’s
avant-garde artists to create works together. They examine the
perplexed spiritual state of the generations that grew up with
a Communist education but came to embrace pro-democracy sentiments.
Their contribution to this exhibition, the Never Finished Construction
Site, is a digitally manipulated photograph. A group of young people
stands silent and aloof in the vast, deserted concrete framework
of an unfinished building—a sight familiar in many Chinese
cities. The image exposes the alienation engendered by never-ending
demolition and reconstruction. Confronted by this profound confusion,
and reluctant to accept the current system, China’s young
people are awaiting a better society.
Huang Yan
Huang Yan (born Jilin Province, 1966) is an internationally renowned
artist whose works have been widely exhibited. In the past five
years he has developed a body of work based on traditional Chinese
landscape painting and tattoo. His landmark work, Body Landscape,
reproduces these landscapes on the human body. The transposition
of Chinese cultural icons on the living masculine body simultaneously
suggests a rebirth of an ancient culture and the superficiality
of cultural identity. Huang’s contribution to this exhibition,
a new work entitled Copy, shows a naked, Rubenesque Chinese woman
in a studio. She is posed in front of a large-scale reproduction
of a 19th-century European landscape painting and surrounded by
the debris of Western architectural ornaments; a large-scale reproduction
of a classical Chinese landscape painting is the backdrop. Huang
evokes present and past in the tattooed flesh of the model, whose
skin is covered with a traditional Chinese painting; he simultaneously
contrasts East, as represented by the woman, and West, symbolized
by the Western backdrop. Ultimately, the work condemns China’s
loss of direction as epitomized by its misuse or abuse of Western
icons in modernization projects.
Li Luming
One of the older artists participating in this exhibition, Li Luming
(born Hunan, 1956) juxtaposes the images of a young female revolutionary
and a contemporary woman of the same age. The generational rift
between those born in the 1950s and those who came of age in the
new millennium has been intensified by China’s vast social
transitions. Li’s work conveys a sense of historical nihilism
and the absurdity of reality. It uses the metaphor of a mother-daughter
relationship to explore the ambiguous logic between yesterday and
today: as the space between the two widens, China’s imagination
becomes a collage made up of segments of its complicated history
and present-day reality.
Li Wei
Li Wei’s works have drawn wide attention on the world art stage,
and have been featured on the covers of many international art magazines
including Flash Art, Work, and Contemporary. As one of the many migrant
workers who sought a better life in an urban area, Li Wei was subjected
to unfair treatment by a government that cannot guarantee people’s
freedom and equality. Consequently, his performance-based work and
computer-manipulated pictures are concerned with individual courage
and the wisdom of expressing one’s voice in a hectic and dynamic
society in transition. Baby Leaves the Earth considers the possibility
of sustaining life in the ruins of a traditional courtyard and the
implications of nurturing new life in rootless ground. Li Wei was
born in Hubei in 1970.
Liu Jin
Liu Jin’s work is a metaphor for the potential crisis of economic
development. In the Moldy Landscape series, broken toys and utensils
covered in mold are arranged as a multicolored traditional Chinese
landscape painting, charming but ultimately poisonous. The Angel
Wounded series documents a performance in which the artist disguised
himself as an angel with a pair of bloody wings on his back. The
wounded angel appears in an urban setting, amidst the ruins of aged
and demolished houses and the newly finished high rises that dominate
Chinese cityscapes. For Liu Jin, the angel is wounded and the dream
is over. Liu Jin was born in Jiangsu Province in 1971.
Liu Wei
As Beijing prepared to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the
People’s Republic of China in 1999, the better part of a
year was devoted to renovating and reconstructing the landmark
buildings alongside the city’s Chang-an Avenue, the “First
Avenue of China” (Zhonghu Diyi Jie). Artist Liu Wei (born
1965) was alienated by the giant wrapped edifices—buildings
that had witnessed the social and political fluctuations of the
past half-century, from the Cultural Revolution to the June 4th
Massacre. For Liu Wei’s generation, the wrapping of the buildings
constituted a form of mourning for historical events, despite the
fact that the government was using the renovation project to gloss
over a political scar. In his video work, In the Depth of One Hundred
Flowers, Liu Wei expresses his deep concern about the two extremes
of China’s ongoing urbanization program by overlapping images
of central Beijing’s polished skyscrapers with dirty trash
piles on the city’s outskirts.
Ma Yongfeng
Ma Yongfeng (born Shanxi, 1971) is a video artist whose work Swirling has been
exhibited internationally. His new video work, Beijing Zoological Garden,
documents domestic animals and their man-made nests and shelters. The zoo
is comprised of artificial mini-ecosystems designed to ensure the survival
of animal species; each unit is drawn from an imagining of the natural environment
as well as traditional Chinese bird-and-flower scroll paintings. As China’s
fiercely rapid development destroys the natural environment, and animals
are increasingly confined to the screen and the page, this garden becomes
a nostalgic living picture.
Ng Fong Chao
Ng Fong Chao was educated in Mainland China and has been working in Macau for
the past ten years. His subtly nostalgic work explores personal and cultural
metamorphosis, and particularly the interaction between rapid and overwhelming
westernization and inborn cultural identity. In a photograph documenting
a performance, Turns a Blind Eye (II), Ng fuses mirror images--one color,
one black and white--of himself in a wedding dress, Macao’s traditional
architecture in the background.
Sheng Qi
Sheng Qi (born Hefei, 1965) is one of China’s most influential
performance artists. He was a key member of the 1985 New Wave Art
Movement inspired by rationalism and liberalism. In 1989, driven
by despair and agony after the June 4th Tiananmen Square incident,
Sheng cut off a finger from his left hand and buried it in a flowerpot
in Beijing. After more than ten years of self-exile, Sheng returned
to Beijing and began to photograph his mutilated hand. Memories is
the signature image of Sheng's excavation of the past, both personal
and historical. In the picture, Sheng’s left hand holds a picture
of his friend. It is one of the artist's most ambitious performances
in its extraordinarily disturbing power of representation, its extension
of meanings, and its search for a historical past.
Xing Danwen
Xing Danwen was born in Xi’an and studied at New York’s School
of Visual Art before returning to Beijing in 2002. Her works have been featured
in many international exhibitions, including the Whitney Biennale 2002. In
the disCONNEXION series she photographs piles of discarded computer chips and
obsolete hardware in the deserted outskirts of Guangdong province, one of the
most developed areas in China. Electronic waste is shipped illegally from countries
such as Japan and the United States and dumped along Guangdong’s coast,
where more than 100,000 people make their living by recycling these piles of
e-trash, operating in poor conditions and with simple tools. Over the years,
the land has been destroyed and people have been severely injured by the poisonous
material. Xing’s work explores the interaction between global and local
economies and questions the rhetoric of Chinese development by documenting
the cost of environmental pollution.
Zhang Dali
Zhang Dali (born Harbin, 1963), a Beijing-based graffiti artist who resided
in Italy for five years in the early 1990s, makes his own mark on the streets
of an increasingly incoherent and unrecognizable city. Over the last ten
years, he has airbrushed a man’s profile on Beijing’s traditional
courtyard houses as they underwent demolition. He then photographs these
ruins using the surrounding new buildings as a backdrop. The Demolition series
documents a one-man war against the government’s overwhelming desire
to overlay China’s past with a veneer of modernization by constructing
a modern-looking city. These works expose decision-makers whose readiness
to ignore cultural traditions may be innocent, but whose neglect of the interests
of local residents is intentional. By making ephemeral work on the man-made
ruins of aged courtyard houses, Zhang Dali links the past with the future
and the individual with society.
Zhang Wei
Changsha-based artist Zhang Wei has produced a series of computer-manipulated
works that insert contemporary Western commercial icons into scenes from
classical Chinese paintings: Marilyn Monroe in a Taihushi stone garden, semi-naked
cover girls in front of a traditional bird-and-flower setting. This pictorial
integration of East and West recasts the conventional binary concept in light
of China’s new cultural experiences.
About the Curator
Zhang Zhaohui grew up in Beijing and received his B.A. from Nankai University
Tianjing (1988), an M.A. in modern art history from the China Art Academy
(1995), and an M.A. in Curatorial Studies from Bard College New York (1998).
He is the recipient of fellowships from the Asian Cultural Council and the
Luce Foundation and a visiting scholarship from Asialink. From 1988 to 1992
he served on the curatorial staff of the National Museum of Art, Beijing.
From 1999 to 2000 he was the director of the Curatorial Section at He Xiangning
Art Museum, Shenzhen. In 2002 he became the founding director of Beijing
X-ray Art Center. He is currently a PhD candidate at The Central Academy
of Art Beijing and a research fellow of the Hong Kong-based Asia Art Archive.
Curated exhibitions include Where Heaven and Earth Meet: Xu Bing and Cai
GuoQiang (1998, New York), Departure from China (1999, Beijing), Food as
Art (2000, Beijing), Gravity of the Garden (2000, Shenzhen), Zero Degrees
Project (2001, Beijing), Mask vs Face (Beijing 2002), New Urbanism (Guangzhou
2002 and Sydney 2004), Manufactured Happiness (Beijing 2003), and Bare Androgyny
(2003, Beijing).
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