Showing posts with label China. Show all posts
Showing posts with label China. Show all posts

27/05/25

Zhao Yinou @ HdM Gallery, Beijing - "Ghost Raising" Exhibition

Zhao Yinou: Ghost Raising
HdM Gallery, Beijing
Through 28 June 2025

Zhao Yinou
ZHAO YINOU
2024-25.3, 150 × 220 cm, 2024-2025
© Zhao Yinou, courtesy HdM Gallery

Zhao Yinou
ZHAO YINOU
2025.4, 150 × 220 cm, 2025 
© Zhao Yinou, courtesy HdM Gallery

Zhao Yinou
ZHAO YINOU
2025.10, 50 × 35 cm, 2025
© Zhao Yinou, courtesy HdM Gallery

Zhao Yinou
ZHAO YINOU
2020-25.14, 150 × 220 cm, 2020-2025
© Zhao Yinou, courtesy HdM Gallery

HdM Gallery presents “Ghost Raising”, the latest solo exhibition of Zhao Yinou. This is Zhao Yinou’s third solo exhibition at HdM Gallery after “On the Wings of A Swan” in 2022. The exhibition features over 30 works on canvas and wood, alongside the artist’s first experimental integration of sound installations within painting. Zhao’s recent practice delves into meditations on eternity, transforming diffuse collective memories of our era-viewed through the microscopic lens of individual experience-into layered spatiotemporal structures. 

Light
Light is the universe’s primal language—formless yet shaping all visible forms. In Zhao Yinou’s oeuvre, light manifests itself as a spiritual presence: the sacred light, the arbitrary light, the stalemate light, and the repressed light appear repeatedly in different densities and in different stages of her creation, forming multiple echoes between the artist her spatiotemporal self. In her new artworks, light appears in every infinite texture and space radiated by herself, becoming a link connecting countless parallel spaces: on ice, sea, trees, mountains, and grasslands, resembles a fleeting blink of cosmic radiance.
 
Dust
The traces after "burning" are not only the suspension of material particles in the layers of paint, but also the poetic interval between the artist's memory and the present. Zhao Yinou's creation does not rely on linear narrative. She restrains and selects emotions and memories in a cross-dimensional perspective. Time is distorted into any frame that can be extracted in the physical dimension, and transformed into repeated brushstrokes and spray-painted textures on the canvas. Layered surfaces do not merely obscure but capture emotional variables through accumulated dust, extrapolating potential parallel worlds. The delayed emotional catharsis and stratified “dust” forge an intangible distance between artwork and viewer, immersing audiences in a heterogeneous field of overlapping time and space—a realm both visual and psychic.
 
Breath
The sound installation incorporated into this exhibition leads the audience into the artist's sealed field with a flowing energy that can be perceived in multiple dimensions. The low hum on the back of each artwork once again forms a kind of unspeakable "interval" with the audience. The "breath" of hearing drives the "breath" of vision. Between one breath and another, time is like a lie, the future collapses into the past, and the past flows towards the end.
 
Reignition
The brevity inherent in the  existence of human beings in the universe is heavy and depressing; in this unburned box, Zhao Yinou uses almost always monochrome paint to visualize abstract emotions into an existence that jumps out of time and space, in the rational laws of physics, she uses a silent declaration to outline a love letter, which is eternally entangled in the vast smoke.
 
ZHAO YINOU was born in 1972 and currently lives and works in Paris. She was  the producer of documentaries “À l'ouest des rails” and “He Fengming”. Recent group and solo exhibitions include: “Being of Evils”, Hive Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing, China (2020); “Psychicalreality”, Space Station, Beijing, China (2019); “Prisonnier”, Vanities, Paris, French (2019); “HAPPY PEOPLE......”, Inside-out Art Museum, Beijing, China (2019); “HER KIND•CHUANG”, Zhuzhong Art Museum, Beijing, China (2018); “The Pleasures of Adventures”, N3 gallery, Beijing, China (2016); “OPEN TO YOU”, Pusan, Korea (2014) and etc. 

HdM GALLERY
798 East Road, 798 Art District, No.2 Jiuxianqiao Road, Chaoyang District, 100015 Beijing

Zhao Yinou: Ghost Raising
HdM Gallery, Beijing, 17 May - 28 June 2025

22/04/25

Ceramist Alain Vernis @ HdM Gallery, Beijing - "Black" Exhibition

Alain Vernis | Black 
HdM Gallery, Beijing
9 April - 10 May 2025

HdM Gallery and Luohan Tang present Black, a solo exhibition by artist ALAIN VERNIS. The exhibition features over a dozen ceramic bowls, focusing on the artist’s exploration and enlightement of ceramics over the years.

Alain Vernis: The charm of simplicity

Alain Vernis's works are mainly pottery bowls. Since he set up his studio in the Haut-Morvan in 1985, he has started to make pottery with local clay. Alain Vernis didn’t learn from a master, he relied on his own exploration from kiln construction to firing. The primitive pit that he used then caused all of the pieces, shaped over ten years, to explode. He had no choice but to give up pit firing and build a new kiln. After years of adjustments, he came to discover the effects of diverse combinations of clay, water, duration of firing, type of wood. Black was once used by Taoism to discribe the invisible and intangible universe, “Darkness within darkness, the gateway to all understanding. ”  Darkness presents color and also the profoundness of Taoism. Alain Vernis uses black extensively in his works, shaping through “renouncement” and firing with “naturalness” . The combination of shape and glaze color explains the charm of simplicity.
 
Alain Vernis: Deep connection with Raku-yaki technique

The famous Raku-yaki technique of the Momoyama period in Japan in the 16th century is characterized by simplicity and naturalness. The seemingly "imperfect" works break the traditional aesthetic system of symmetry and glaze perfection, which is similar to Alain Vernis's works. Starting with a handful of clay, Alain focuses his perception on his hands and slowly kneads the bowl into shape, combining the beauty of form with the beauty of spirit. The surface of the bowl is either smooth or rough, with the glaze color bolding, and even natural flow appears. However, it was not until the 15th generation of Raku-yaki master invited him to Japan that he realized that he had such a deep connection with those masters of several centuries ago.
 
Alain Vernis was born in Sens, France in 1946 and currently lives and works in Morvan. His works have been exhibited in art institutions such as the Biracte Archaeological Museum in Burgundy, Guardian Art Center in China and Musée d‘art Moderne, Musée national de la Céramique, Musée de Bibracte, Musée Asrien Dubouché, Musée Bernard Palissy, Musée de Sarreguemines, Musée Joseph Séchelette in France.

HdM GALLERY
798 East Road, 798 Art District, No.2 Jiuxianqiao Road, Chaoyang District, 100015 Beijing

28/01/25

Recasting the Past: The Art of Chinese Bronzes, 1100–1900 @ Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC & Shanghai Museum

Recasting the Past: The Art of Chinese Bronzes, 1100–1900
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
February 28 – September 28, 2025
Shanghai Museum 
November 12, 2025 – March 16, 2026

Incense burner in the form of a goose, China
Ming dynasty (1368–1644), early 15th century. Bronze
H. 14 1/2 in. (36.8 cm); W. 18 3/4 in. (47 6 cm)
Purchase, The Vincent Astor Foundation Gift, 2020 - 2020.335a, b
The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Water dropper in the form of a rhinoceros
China, Ming dynasty (1368–1644), 15th century, Bronze
H. 2 1/8 in (5.4 cm); W. 5 in. (12.7 cm); D. 1 7/8 in. (4.8 cm)  
Purchase, The Vincent Astor Foundation Gift, 2015 - 2015.294
The Metropolitan Museum of Art

"Taihe" bell, note "Jiazhong"
China, Song dynasty (960–1279), ca. 1105, reinscribed ca. 1174
Bronze, H. 9 in. (22.8 cm)
Courtesy of the Palace Museum, Beijing

In ancient China, bronze vessels were emblems of ritual and power. A millennium later, in the period from 1100 to 1900, such vessels were rediscovered as embodiments of a long-lost golden age that was worthy of study and emulation. This “return to the past” (fugu) was part of a widespread phenomenon across all the arts to reclaim the virtues of a classical tradition. An important aspect of this phenomenon was the revival of bronze casting as a major art form. Recasting the Past: The Art of Chinese Bronzes, 1100–1900 aims to be the most comprehensive study of Chinese bronzes during this period. This exhibition, co-organized by The Met and the Shanghai Museum, where it will open following its display in New York, presents the new aesthetic represented by these creative adaptations of the past, while exploring their cultural and political significance throughout China’s long history.
“While bronze as an art form has long held a significant role throughout China’s history, this exhibition explores an often-overlooked time period when a resurgence of craftsmanship and artistic achievements revitalized the medium,” said Max Hollein, The Met’s Marina Kellen French Director and Chief Executive Officer. “Bringing together major loans from institutions in China alongside works from The Met collection, this exhibition offers viewers an important opportunity to better understand the lasting aesthetic and cultural impact of bronze objects.”
The exhibition is divided into five thematic and chronological sections that explicate over 200 works of art—an array of bronze vessels complemented by a selection of paintings, ceramics, jades, and other media. Some 100 pieces from The Met collection will be augmented by nearly 100 loans from major institutions in China, Japan, Korea, Germany, France, the United Kingdom, and the United States to present the most comprehensive narrative of the ongoing importance of bronzes as an art medium throughout China’s long history. Featured in the exhibition are around 60 loans from institutions in China, including major works such as a monumental 12th-century bell with imperial procession from the Liaoning Provincial Museum, documented ritual bronzes for Confucian temples from the Shanghai Museum, and luxury archaistic vessels made in the 18th-century imperial workshop from the Palace Museum, Beijing.

Vase with archaistic design
China, Yuan dynasty (1271–1368), 14th century
Bronze, H. 15 1/2 in. (39.4 cm) ; Diam. 8 in. (20.3 cm); 
Diam. of rim 4 3/8 in. (11.1 cm); Diam. of foot 5 5/8 in. (14.3 cm) 
Purchase, Brooke Russell Astor Bequest, 2014 - 2014.449
The Metropolitan Museum of Art

Ritual vessel (xizun)
China, Qing dynasty (1644–1911), 
Qianlong mark and period (1736–95)
Bronze, H. 15 3/16 in. (38.6 cm);
Diam. 4 5/16 in. (11 cm); Wt. 36,4 lb (16.5 kg)
Courtesy of the Palace Museum, Beijing

The exhibition begins with the section “Reconstructing Ancient Rites,” which introduces how emperors and scholar-officials commissioned ritual bronzes from the 12th to the 16th century as part of an effort to restore and align themselves with antique ceremonies and rites. The exhibition continues with “Experimenting with Styles,” illustrating how the form, decoration, and function of ancient bronzes were creatively reinterpreted from the 13th to the 15th century. The next section, “Establishing New Standards,” explores further transformations in both the aesthetic and technical direction of bronze making from the 15th to the 17th century. The fourth section, “Living with Bronzes,” features a display in the Ming Furniture Room (Gallery 218) to demonstrate how bronzes were used in literati life from the 16th to the 19th century. The last section, “Harmonizing with Antiquity,” examines how the deep scholarly appreciation of archaic bronzes during the 18th and 19th centuries led to a final flourishing of bronze production.
Pengliang Lu, Brooke Russell Astor Curator of Chinese Art at The Met, said: “This exhibition attempts a long-overdue reevaluation of later Chinese bronzes by seeking to establish a reliable chronology of this art form across the last millennium of Chinese history. The exhibition will also distinguish outstanding works from lesser examples based on their artistic and cultural merits.”
This exhibition provides visitors with a captivating experience as they follow the shifting cultural roles and evolving canons of beauty represented in later bronzes.

Installation view of Recasting the Past: 
The Art of Chinese Bronzes, 1100–1900, 
on view February 28 – September 28, 2025 
at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 
Photo by Paul Lachenauer, courtesy of The Met

Installation view of Recasting the Past: 
The Art of Chinese Bronzes, 1100–1900, 
on view February 28 – September 28, 2025 
at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 
Photo by Paul Lachenauer, courtesy of The Met

Installation view of Recasting the Past: 
The Art of Chinese Bronzes, 1100–1900, 
on view February 28 – September 28, 2025 
at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. 
Photo by Paul Lachenauer, courtesy of The Met

Later Chinese bronzes have long been stigmatized as poor imitations of ancient bronzes rather than being seen as fundamentally new creations with their own aesthetic and functional character. This exhibition redresses this misunderstanding by showcasing their artistic virtuosity, innovative creativity, and wide cultural impact. Through archaeologically recovered examples and cross-medium comparisons to a wide range of objects, the exhibition demonstrates the ongoing importance and influence of bronzes as well as how they inspired the form and function of works in other media.

Recasting the Past: The Art of Chinese Bronzes, 1100–1900 is curated by Pengliang Lu, Brooke Russell Astor Curator of Chinese Art at The Metropolitan Museum of Art.

The exhibition is accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue. A beautiful and very interesting book!

Recasting the Past
The Art of Chinese Bronzes, 1100-1900
by Pengliang Lu
Published by The Metropolitan Museum of Art 
Distributed by Yale University Press
304 pages, 9.50 x 11.20 in, 300 color illus.
Hardcover, 9781588397904, 15 April 2025

METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART
The Met Fifth Avenue, Galleries 209-218

SHANGHAI MUSEUM

31/10/24

Making It Matters Exhibition @ M+ Museum, Hong Kong

Making It Matters
M+ Museum, Hong Kong
Opens 2 November 2024

Installation view of Making It Matters, 2024 
Photo: Dan Leung. Image courtesy of M+, Hong Kong

M+, Asia’s global museum of contemporary visual culture in the West Kowloon Cultural District (WestK) in Hong Kong, presents the new exhibition Making It Matters. Drawn from the M+ Collections, this exhibition examines making as a process of creative expression and its long-lasting impact on individual lives, global communities, and fragile ecosystems.

Making It Matters mostly draws upon the diverse works of the M+ Collections. The artists, designers, and architects featured include John Cage, Harold Cohen, Julie & Jesse, John Maeda, Raffaella della Olga, Anna Ridler, Ki Saigon, Fujimori Terunobu, Jay Sae Jung Oh, Stanley Wong, and Võ Trọng Nghĩa Architects. It follows the process of making from concept and research to design and fabrication, as well as the social networks that link each step. By delving into the inspirations, techniques, and impacts behind the selected works, the exhibition helps us understand our own roles in processes of making and their relation to our daily lives.

The exhibition also looks at responsible design, material innovation, and creative reuse strategies adopted by innovative makers exploring alternative modes of thinking. These ideas are situated within wider historical and sociopolitical contexts across four thematic sections:

Ceramics: A Story of Shifting Values explores the complex and layered history of ceramics and focuses on how one material can shift greatly in value and perception over time. The section begins with the kilns of Jingdezhen in China and follows the development of blue-and-white ceramics over centuries. The section serves as a prelude to the three facets of making that the exhibition explores—material experimentation, the evolution of tools, and consumerism’s impacts on our environment. Highlights include a Qing dynasty vase with tubular handles and lotus design in underglaze blue on loan from the Hong Kong Museum of Art; an armorial ware dish with coat of arms and overglaze famille rose enamels on loan from the Chinese University of Hong Kong; and a contemporary re-imagining of blue-and-white ceramics by Ni Haifeng from the M+ Sigg Collection, titled Of the Departure and the Arrival (2005).
 
Material Potential highlights how makers experiment with a variety of materials, including neon, resin, and bamboo, discovering new processes, methods, and forms along the way. This section explores how makers develop skills and techniques that turn material challenges into opportunities for innovation. A restored Hong Kong neon sign for Very Good Tailor (1963) is on display in the museum for the first time alongside rarely seen original sketches of neon designs. Võ Trọng Nghĩa Architects’ study model of Wind and Water Café (wNw Café) (2006) showcases the versatility of bamboo as a fast-growing, sustainable material, whilst Barbara Sansoni’s sketches and colourful weavings depicting landscapes in Sri Lanka show the versatility of community handweaving practices.
 
The Hand and the Machine examines how the development of computing, artificial intelligence, and machine learning revolutionised the making process. By offering new, hybrid working methods, these innovations prompt questions about what craft might look like in this context. Since the 1960s, a new generation of artists have transformed concepts into algorithms and have increasingly produced non-linear, interactive, or randomised compositions. Highlights include Machine Painting Series TCM#14 (1995) by Harold Cohen, the pioneer of early AI computer art; Reactive Books (Tap, Type, Write) (1998) by technologist, artist, and educator John Maeda; and the archives of the speculative NFT project Bloemenveiling (2019) by Anna Ridler and David Pfau.
 
Actions and Consequences traces how consumerism came to shape contemporary society by demanding mass production, synthetic materials and low-paid labour. This section features a series of posters employing poignant imagery, sleek designs and memorable slogans that alert us to this moral and ecological crisis. Facing this global challenge, some makers focus instead on community engagement and speculative projects that address socio-political issues. Some examples on display include models from the Home-for-All project, a community-led design initiative for temporary shelters and gathering spaces after the Great East Japan Earthquake in 2011, and a poignant message to later generations in the form of Ki Saigon’s Letters to the Future (2021), which reflects on single-use plastic waste and its long aftermath.

New display in East Galleries—a restored capsule from Kurokawa Kisho’s Nakagin Capsule Tower

Coinciding with the opening of the exhibition, a restored capsule from Kurokawa Kisho’s iconic Nakagin Capsule Tower (1970–1972) is on display in the East Galleries. The tower once housed 140 self-contained units of small apartments intended for people who worked in Tokyo’s urban centre while living in the suburbs. It was one of the few buildings realised as part of the 1960s Japanese architectural movement Metabolism, one of the most significant architectural movements to have emerged from Asia. The tower fell into disrepair in the early 2000s, and despite numerous preservation attempts and global media attention, it was demolished in 2022. Only twenty-three capsules were saved and restored, and M+ is among the few museums to acquire a capsule. The display includes newly produced videos about the birth of Metabolism, Kurokawa’s vision, the tower’s structural ingenuity, and the fate of the building, eloquently explained by the architect and historian Fujimori Terunobu, produced by M+ with the support of NHK Enterprises. Together with Kikutake Kiyonori’s Panel from Expo Tower (1968–1970), Osaka, currently on display in the exhibition Things, Spaces, Interactions, the acquisition of the Nakagin capsule makes M+ the only museum to hold two architectural fragments from the very few realised Metabolism projects.
Suhanya Raffel, Museum Director, M+, says, "Making It Matters offers a compelling story through the intricate world of creation, showcasing the exceptional breadth and depth of the M+ Collections. This exhibition illuminates the profound connections between contemporary visual culture and our daily lives and highlights the diverse stories that show us why the act of making continues to matter in society. I am particularly pleased that a capsule of Kurokawa Kisho’s Nakagin Capsule Tower, now in the M+ Collections, is on view next to Kuramata Shiro's Kiyotomo Sushi Bar (1988), creating a unique dialogue between Japanese design and architectural craftsmanship at different times in the modern world."

Ikko Yokoyama, Lead Curator, Design and Architecture, M+, says, "Making It Matters focuses on aspects of making processes and their impacts through key works, highlighting the motivations, methods, and influences behind the objects in our lives. It extends the presentation of the current Design and Architecture exhibition Things, Spaces, Interactions and goes beyond disciplines to focus on the journey from concept to creation. This innovative display not only celebrates the ingenuity of makers, artists, designers, and architects, but also demonstrates how deeply intertwined the process of making is with our shared human experience and the evolving landscape of contemporary visual culture. The carefully restored capsule from Nakagin Capsule Tower is an internationally recognised architectural icon that embodies the highly refined lifestyle and culture of modern workers in Japan. It is a manifestation of creative expression, functionality, optimism, and societal change."
M+ MUSEUM
West Kowloon Cultural District, 38 Museum Drive, Kowloon, Hong Kong

22/04/24

Photofairs Shanghai 2024 Hightlights - 9th edition @ Shanghai Exhibition Centre

PHOTOFAIRS Shanghai 2024, 9th edition 
Shanghai Exhibition Centre 
April 25 - 28, 2024 

Xu Haifeng
Xu Haifeng 
Shanghai, 1990s 
© Xu Haifeng
Courtesy of the artist and RUIPIN Gallery

Aoife Shanahan
Aoife Shanahan 
Migration of Silver, 2023 
© Aoife Shanahan 
Courtesy of the artist and Green on Red Gallery

Liz Nielsen
Liz Nielsen  
Daydreamer, 2024 
© Liz Nielsen  
Courtesy of the artist and Elijah Wheat Showroom

Xu Guanyu
Xu Guanyu 
Resident Aliens MG-08112017-03112023, 2023 
© Xu Guanyu 
Courtesy of the artist and Gaotai Gallery

PHOTOFAIRS Shanghai 2024 welcomes 46 exhibitors, comprising local and international galleries, leading arts organizations, and cultural partners. Showcasing the work of more than 150 artists, from well-established figures to emerging talents, PHOTOFAIRS Shanghai 2024 continues to be a meeting point for photography in China, convening a highly-curated selection of exhibitors from Asia Pacific and beyond. 

PHOTOFAIRS SHANGHAI 2024 - GALLERY HIGHLIGHTS

Representing more than 20 cities, including Paris, Beijing, London, New York, Amsterdam, and Tokyo, PHOTOFAIRS Shanghai 2024 features a curated selection of exhibitors in its Main and Platform sectors, from established photography dealers to emerging contemporary galleries presenting innovative work in the photographic medium.

Highlights from this year’s presentations include leading artists and galleries from China and the wider Asia Pacific region, such as ShanghART Gallery’s (Shanghai / Beijing / Singapore) solo showcase of 13 selected works by Singaporean artist Robert Zhao Renhui spanning various long-term projects from across his career, ahead of his representation of Singapore at the Venice Biennale 2024; a presentation by UP Gallery (Hsinchu) of new works by American photographer Anastasia Samoylova from her ongoing project, in which the artist stages imaginary breakfast encounters with luminaries of photography that have inspired her practice; M ART CENTER’s (Shanghai) presentation of new works by Luo Dan from his recently completed No Man’s Land project, which explores our relationship with the world surrounding us; Gaotai Gallery’s (Urumqi) presentation of works by photographer Tian Lin from his series Yamalik Mountain, alongside new works by celebrated artist Xu Guanyu from his ongoing Resident Aliens project, and Ma Hailun’s latest series Kashi Youth, focusing on youth culture in China’s westernmost city; a booth of international artists from Matthew Liu Fine Arts’ (Shanghai) roster, including the likes of Candida Höfer, Valery Katsuba, Flor Garduño, and Yang Yongliang; and X Contemporary Art’s (Changsha) presentation of works by Li Weiyi and Jiang Zhi. 

Elsewhere, RUIPIN Gallery (Shanghai) presents archival works by Meng Minsheng and Xu Haifeng, both documenting urban life in China in the second half of the 20th century; meanwhile C14 Gallery (Shanghai) exhibits leading photographer Mo Yi’s shots of Beijing and Tianjin in the 1980s and 1990s; HART Gallery (Hangzhou) displays new works by Lu Yanpeng and Taca Sui, whose practices examine Chinese traditional culture and how it blends in with the surrounding physical landscape; and Shun Art Gallery (Shanghai / Tokyo) presents a dual show of works by Chinese multimedia artist Maleonn and Japanese photographer Hirotaka Sato. Other leading Chinese galleries presenting at the fair include Three Shadows +3 Gallery (Beijing / Xiamen), presenting works by established artists from the region, including Koo Bohnchang and Yin Yunya; see+ Gallery (Beijing / Shenzhen / Chengdu); and A Thousand Plateaus Art Space (Chengdu).

Highlights from international galleries presenting at the fair include a solo show by leading French artist JR, known for his large-scale black-and-white photography installations, presented by Galleria Continua (San Gimignano & 7 locations), and a group presentation by ATLAS Gallery (London) of classic and contemporary photography from some of the medium’s most celebrated artists, including Hiroshi Sugimoto, Elliott Erwitt, Marc Riboud, William Klein and Terry O. Neil to name a few. Three new international galleries exhibiting for the first time at the fair are also joining this year’s line-up: Galerie Bacqueville (Lille / Vlissingen), presenting a dual show by French artists Thomas Devaux and David de Beyter; Green On Red Gallery (Dublin) presenting the works of Alan Butler and Aoife Shanahan, two Irish artists who both interrogate the boundaries of the medium through a scientific approach, the former documenting plant life through cyanotypes and the latter exposing film to bacteria to create abstractions that highlight the unseen presence of bacteria in photography; and MICK Galerie (Amsterdam), showcasing three emerging Dutch female photographers: Carlie Consemulder, Lotte Ekkel and Nanda Hagenaars.

PHOTOFAIRS SHANGHAI 2024 - PROGRAMMING HIGHLIGHTS

Complementing the booth shows are special presentations by leading cultural institutions and fair partners, alongside a vibrant public and satellite program, offering an expanded view of the photographic medium. 

For this year’s Insights sector, entitled Softness, four galleries from the United States are brought together by PHOTOFAIRS New York Director Helen Toomer to present innovative and multidisciplinary works united by themes of malleability and softness. Ranging from portraits focusing on the delicate forms of the human body and the tenderness of interpersonal interactions, to landscapes highlighting the gentle beauty of the fauna and flora, the exhibition evokes ‘the power of art to bring comfort and reprieve through a multi-sensory experience’. The audience is invited to reevaluate the importance of softness in helping us to make sense of the world around us. Participating exhibitors are: bitforms gallery (New York), presenting digital works by Ellie Pritts and Auriea Harvey; Chela Mitchell Gallery (Washington, D.C.), showcasing portraits by Nate Langston Palmer; Elijah Wheat Showroom (Newburgh), presenting Liz Nielsen’s light paintings, Jon Verney’s Decomposites, and Rhiannon Adam’s collages of large-scale Polaroid emulsion lifts on watercolor paper; and Fahey/Klein Gallery (Los Angeles) showcasing works by the acclaimed Australian duo Honey Long and Prue Stent, exploring the relationship between femininity and the natural world. This exhibition is the first collaboration between PHOTOFAIRS’ editions in Shanghai and New York, facilitating cultural exchange between the fairs to offer audiences an expansive, cross-border view of the photographic medium.

PHOTOFAIRS Shanghai 2024 welcomes back four leading cultural organizations that have contributed to the development of photographic art in its dedicated Culture Spaces sector. The Miguel de Cervantes Library (Shanghai) presents a solo show by Spanish multimedia artist Pilar Albarracín, while the Shanghai Doland Museum of Modern Art (Shanghai) showcases their Annual Report of Chinese Contemporary Photography and Video Arts. Also joining the Culture Spaces sector are Swatch Art Peace Hotel (Shanghai), presenting an exhibition featuring several emerging photographic and video artists who have participated in their residency program, including Zhou Peng, Luo Jian, Marc Aziz Ressang, Yanir Shani, Jeppe Lange and He Yu, and the international photography museum Fotografiska, showcasing works by Swedish-based duo Cooper Gorfer, known for their cross-media collaged portraits of women.

Returning to the fair this year, the Connected sector provides a platform for globally recognized brands to showcase the impact of photography on ventures beyond art, including fashion and luxury. This year’s exhibitors include valued fair partners SIGMA, bringing together the works of legendary Japanese masters Eikoh Hosoe, Daidō Moriyama, and Miyako Ishiuchi in a showcase that reevaluates the equilibrium of time and ritual; KWEICHOW MOUTAI, presenting Water Travels a Thousand Miles, an exhibition inspired by the geographical relationship between the Huangpu River – Shanghai’s main river – and Chishui River where Moutai wine derives from, and featuring artists such as Chen Qi, Dong Wensheng, and Lu Yuanmin; Tmall Luxury and their Seed Project, dedicated to supporting young artists and the development of digital art by featuring multimedia creations from three emerging artists; and Hahnemühle, which celebrates its 440th anniversary by debuting three new digital inkjet artist papers at the fair, alongside works from established artists Yang Yongliang, Yijun Liao, Chen Wei, Lin Zhipeng, Li Qiang and Gai Shaohua presented on more than 10 types of Hahnemühle papers. This year, the fair is also welcome Swedish furniture brand DUXIANA as the VIP Lounge sponsor. A selection of photography works will be displayed in the space, taking inspiration from architect and designer Bruno Mathsson’s 1960 ‘Sommarhus’ (Summer House). 

Beyond the sector, PHOTOFAIRS Shanghai also collaborates with lifestyle social media platform Xiaohongshu to enrich the photography scene in Shanghai during the fair week. A special exhibition space for Xiaohongshu’s Discovery project will be presented at the fair, spotlighting the platform’s outstanding photographers and image creators, alongside the Guide for Photography Art project, linking up with several art institutions in Shanghai to expand the impact of photography and video art, and a newly-launched Visual Portfolio project, inviting the audience to learn more about the exhibitors and their artists. The fair will also launch a limited range of co-branded products with Somma, including canvas bags and craft beers whose design is based on the main visual elements of this edition, echoing the active and open spirit of photography and expressing PHOTOFAIRS Shanghai and Somma’s shared commitment to supporting the continuous development of Shanghai's photography ecosystem.

The fair’s public program is also accompanied by a series of talks, convening leading voices in the field to exchange on the medium’s current issues and relevant topics.

PHOTOFAIRS SHANGHAI 2024 PARTICIPING GALLERIES

A Thousand Plateaus Art Space (Chengdu), ATLAS Gallery (London), bitforms gallery (New York), BONIAN SPACE (Beijing), C14 Gallery (Shanghai), Chela Mitchell Gallery (Washington, D.C.), Elijah Wheat Showroom (Newburgh), Fahey/Klein Gallery (Los Angeles), Galerie Bacqueville (Lille / Vlissingen), Galleria Continua (San Gimignano / Beijing / Les Moulins / Habana / Roma / São Paulo / Paris / Dubai), Gaotai Gallery (Urumqi), Green On Red Gallery (Dublin), HART Gallery (Hangzhou), HTAN GALLERY (Xiamen), Inter Gallery (Beijing), M ART CENTER (Shanghai), Matthew Liu Fine Arts (Shanghai), MAYPARK Gallery (Chengdu), ME ART Gallery (Beijing), MICK Galerie (Amsterdam), Nine Art Gallery (Shenzhen), None Project (Shanghai), Pan-View Gallery (Zhengzhou), PHOTISM (Chengdu), RUIPIN Gallery (Shanghai), see+ Gallery (Beijing / Shenzhen / Chengdu), ShanghART Gallery (Shanghai / Beijing / Singapore), Shun Art Gallery (Shanghai / Tokyo), Three Shadows +3 Gallery (Beijing / Xiamen), UP Gallery (Hsinchu), View Contemporary Art Center (Lanzhou), WhyWhyArt (Shanghai), X Contemporary Art (Changsha)

PHOTOFAIRS SHANGHAI 2024 VISITOR INFORMATION

Thursday April 25, 2-8pm (Collector Preview)
Friday April 26, 12-8pm (Collector Preview)
Saturday April 27, 12-8pm (Public Day)
Sunday April 28, 12-6pm (Public Day)

Shanghai Exhibition Centre, 1000 YanAn Road (C), near Tongren Road

PHOTOFAIRS SHANGHAI

28/01/24

Chen Ke: New Year greeting card for Kering

Kering invites prominent contemporary Chinese artist Chen Ke to celebrate Chinese New Year

Chen Ke
, Dragon Boat 
Image Courtesy of Kering

In honor of the upcoming Chinese New Year in February 2024, Kering has invited Chen Ke, a prominent female contemporary Chinese artist, to collaborate on a crossover art project titled "Dragon Boat". The project empowers imagination and go beyond traditional cultural symbols, conveying a contemporary artistic touch to ring in a new year of prosperity.

Born in the 1970s, Chen Ke has witnessed the rapid development of China. In her creative career, she has skillfully intertwined Chinese traditional culture with Western culture. She typically uses the oil painting medium to evoke experiences and memories while signaling open-ended growth.

Her oil painting masterpiece "Dragon Boat" draws inspiration from the ancient Chinese legend of dragons. People endow this creature, derived from imagination, with free forms and personalities, embodying rich emotions. 

On the vast icy surface, a dragon boat with a non-traditional shape slowly approaches a little girl dressed in winter clothes. The narrative context originates from traditional Chinese roots, but takes a different path, full of whimsy. The dragon boat is not just a boat nor a traditional symbol – it represents living beings, nature, and the universe. The dialogue between the child and the dragon boat transcends language to speak to the heart. The artist has expressed hope and joy in a world of imagination, presenting a unique and unrestricted wish in the Year of the Dragon. 

Collaborating with Chinese artists on Lunar New Year campaigns has become a tradition for Kering: an important moment to pay homage to Chinese traditions with a contemporary twist. In 2023, the Group collaborated with contemporary Chinese painter Peng Wei, whose artwork That Year celebrated harmony of humans and nature via biodiversity protection. In 2022, Kering welcomed the year of the Tiger by commissioning contemporary calligrapher’s Xu Jing auspicious brushstroke. In 2020, papercut artist Wen Qiwen and her piece Gazing at the sky beyond the clouds presented a playful nod to Kering’s Chinese name “kaiyun”. The year before,Kering’s new year greetings saw another word play twist with artist Xu Bing’s innovative "English square character" calligraphy. These collaborations not only showcase Kering's support for art but also reflect its continuous pursuit of innovation and diversity.

In the upcoming Year of the Dragon, Kering and Chen Ke will present fascinating and excellent works of art. They will echo the Group’s signature mission, "Empowering Imagination", while aligning with Kering’s core concept of creativity and innovation, reflecting its core value of empowering women. This has long been supported by Kering’s Women In Motion program that shines a light on women’s contribution to culture and the arts. Earlier, Chen Ke was interviewed on the Kering Women In Motion official WeChat account, sharing her own creative vision.

In addition to the printed version of the artist's original artwork as a New Year greeting card, this crossover creative project also includes digital formats. Starting from January 23rd, Kering is also launching the "Kering Creative Relay" social challenge on its official Red account, inviting the public to participate in a New Year's wish campaign. 

Chen Ke Biography

Chen Ke, born in 1978 in Tongjiang, Sichuan province, currently lives and works in Beijing.She holds a master’s degree from Sichuan Fine Arts Institute.

Chen Ke launched her career in Beijing after obtaining a BA from the Oil Painting Department of Sichuan Academy of Fine Arts in 2002 and an MFA in 2005 from the same faculty. Chen is among the generation witnessing the rapid development of China. Traditional Chinese culture and Western culture have intertwined throughout her growth and career.

In Chen’s early works, a fragile little girl was often depicted in a surrealistic background, struggling with a reversed reality, or wallowing in nostalgia in a lonely and innocent manner. Since 2012, Chen began to use the real figures in her photographic works as the object of description. From Frida to Monroe, she expressed her feelings in real life through the interpretation of these characters, especially the situation of women in society. And the experience of time and life.

In 2018, Chen set out on a new series, attempting to deal with the genuine feelings she has about her father. In these paintings, she managed to approach her personal experience and understanding of life in a more straightforward method. Through a series of mixed media paintings and installations inspired by the daily talk with the artist’s father, Chen discussed about youth, characteristic, family and aging in her solo exhibition The Real Deal is Talking with Dad at Yuz Museum (Shanghai, China).

In 2020, Chen debuts the Bauhaus Gal series. These portraits are based on the zeitgeist-charged archive photos of the Bauhaus. Chen prefers the classical conventions when delineating the faces of these pioneering young women of modern times. Immersed in their own world and in deep thought, they are completely oblivious of the gazes from the outside. While transforming into painting, these archive images undergo “physical implants” so that the painter can relive certain moments in life and recollect involuntary memories such as smell, light and touch, thereby reviving those black and white figures in these historical records. Her awareness of medium from years of painting practice helps her to establish a link between the ancient spirit and contemporary sentiments.

Chen Ke plots her art inside her own script, involving the medium of painting in the mutual generation of experiences and memories to endeavor an open-ended development. 

About Kering

A global Luxury group, Kering manages the development of a series of renowned Houses in Fashion, Leather Goods and Jewelry: Gucci, Saint Laurent, Bottega Veneta, Balenciaga, Alexander McQueen, Brioni, Boucheron, Pomellato, DoDo, Qeelin, Ginori 1735 as well as Kering Eyewear and Kering Beauté.

08/01/24

Heidi Bucher @ Red Brick Art Museum, Beijing - "Heidi Bucher: Beyond the Skins" Exhibition

Heidi Bucher: Beyond the Skins
Red Brick Art Museum, Beijing
Through January 21, 2024

Heidi Bucher
Heidi Bucher: Beyond the Skins
Red Brick Art Museum, Beijing

Red Brick Art Museum presents a major retrospective exhibition entitled "Heidi Bucher: Beyond the Skins", featuring the avant-garde artist HEIDI BUCHER (1926-1993). Regarded as one of the most significant but widely overlooked artists of the 20th century, Heidi Bucher's showcase is curated by Yan Shijie with assistance from Yan Zi. For the first time in China, this exhibition presents over 100 of her important works, including rediscovered and restored visual materials, early paintings on paper, abstract silk collages, wearable sculptures from her time in Los Angeles, her iconic "skinning" series that explores the relationship between architecture and the human body, and her later works created on Lanzarote Island. These transformative artworks delve into human psychology and spatial connections while also addressing important themes of gender, society, and politics that are central to her artistic expression.

In 1983, at the age of 57, Heidi Bucher set foot on Lanzarote, Spain, a volcanic island situated amid the vastness of the Atlantic Ocean. Surrounded by stretches of black lava and volcanic ash — “source of immersion and trust in the primal and the natural”, this has become the place where her finds inspiration.
  
In 1992, she created her final artwork, "La Vida El Muerte" (Life Death), using an old tree trunk to craft a cupboard. Inside were two sacks filled with volcanic ash, one labeled "Life" and the other "Death," both signed with her initials "H.B." Her son, Indigo Bucher, wondered, "Are these bags a ticket from her own life and death? Was she sending these to herself with the essence of life, using Picon (lava ash from Lanzarote) inside? "

Gazing back at Heidi Bucher's artistic journey, her true beginning can be traced back to 1972 when she showcased "Bodyshells" at Venice Beach in Los Angeles. This piece of artwork, along with "Bodywrappings," denoted her first independent series after years of collaboration with her husband, Carl Bucher. This series continued the concept of "Landings to Wear," which involved strolls on Manhattan streets and the transformation of static sculptures into dynamic, wearable, three-dimensional art. During that time, the United States was experiencing a vibrant wave of feminist movements. In Los Angeles, Judy Chicago and Miriam Schapiro founded the feminist art project "Woman House." As a member, Heidi Bucher actively supported "Woman House" and participated in one of its exhibitions. Her time in Los Angeles undoubtedly laid the foundation for her future artistic endeavors.

In 1973, after returning from Los Angeles to Switzerland, where women had just attained suffrage rights in 1971, Heidi Bucher divorced her husband due to creative differences. She rented an underground, windowless cold storage room in Zurich and transformed the former butcher shop into her personal studio. The studio, known as "Borg," marked the beginning of her independent artistic journey, separate from being someone's wife or daughter. In this "safe" space of self-discovery, she embarked on her most groundbreaking creations.

Bucher invented a unique method where she directly "peeled" the interior of spaces like "skin" using latex, a process she dubbed "metamorphosis." During this period, she also employed a mixture of latex and shells to preserve old clothing, creating a texture on the surface that resembled skin in both color and quality. These latex works exuded a distinctly feminine element, featuring items such as pillows, blankets, and even underwear and socks. They not only captured the wrinkles and folds of the garments but also preserved the personal history of their owners.

After her first spatial "skinning" work, "Borg" (1976), Heidi Bucher embarked on a series of architectural "skinnings" related to private domains, including her father's "Gentlemen's Study" (1978) and the "skinning" series of her parental home, which began in 1980. These works delved into a deeper exploration of power dynamics within the family. Bucher believed that the architectural spaces she inhabited and interacted with were not just composed of bricks and cement but also containers of gendered memories and experiences. As she "cleaned" away traces of the past in these rooms during the "skinning" process, it symbolized an imaginative detachment from the patriarchal family structure. Bucher viewed the physical exertion during this process as a form of spiritual liberation.

In the 1980s, Heidi Bucher's "skinning" work expanded beyond private spaces to include public sites with collective historical memories. In 1983, Bucher conducted "skinning" and a performance at the former site of the Le Landeron women's prison. In 1987, she performed "skinning" on the long-abandoned Grand Hôtel Brissago, a place that had once been used to detain Jewish women and children during World War II.

In 1988, Heidi Bucher sought out an abandoned private psychiatric clinic once run for four generations by the Binswanger family, the Bellevue Sanatorium in Bad Kreuzlingen, on Lake Constance. Dr. Binswanger collaborated with the founder of psychoanalysis, Sigmund Freud, and co-published the book "Studies on Hysteria" (the term hysteria being derived from the Greek word hystera, which means uterus.) Throughout the early 20th century, psychiatrists attributed "hysteria" to women's biological characteristics, leading to the violation of many women's human rights. Curatorial Assistant Yan Zi described the floating artwork "The Parlour Office of Doctor Binswanger" as "a soul-like bodyshell, resembling a confession, an association about rituals, mourning and commemorating the countless persecuted women here, exposing and exhibiting their memories, liberating them from the shackles of the past..."

From her days as a student studying fashion design to becoming an artist, Bucher consistently transcended her era, both in her concepts and creations. Curator Yan Shijie stated, "'Bodyshells' marks the first step on Bucher's path to self-liberation. Beginning with "skinning" her parental home, she attempted to break free from the constraints of the patriarchal and cultural norms of that time. The prison 'skinning' marked her entry into the realm of public spaces with political and historical significance. She decoded the power dynamics of knowledge production through her interpretation of the psychiatric clinic where "Studies on Hysteria" originated. By "skinning" the hotel where women and children were once incarcerated by the Nazis, she confronted collective historical oblivion. The "skins" she created became her embodiment."
Curatorial Assistant Yan Zi remarked, "Heidi Bucher's artworks are like energized fossils, narrating the memories and traces of an era, shifting people's perceptions to the profound meanings beyond the material. As a significant artist of the 20th century who has been overlooked in mainstream art history narratives, Heidi Bucher's works have withstood the test of time, eventually gaining recognition within the art world. They continue to thrive, seamlessly intertwining with the tapestry of time, leaving an indelible and profound impact..."
Curator: Yan Shijie

Curatorial Assistant: Yan Zi

Organised by Red Brick Art Museum

Supported by: The Estate of Heidi Bucher, Art Sonje Center, Embassy of Switzerland in China

HEIDI BUCHER - BIOGRAPHY
 
Heidi Bucher (b. 1926, Winterthur, Switzerland; d. 1993, Brunnen, Switzerland) was a Swiss artist who is best remembered for her innovative use of latex and exploration of the physical boundaries between the body and its surroundings. Serving simultaneously as means of historical preservation and metaphorical molting, Bucher’s Hauträume—or “roomskins”—act as indexes of the complicated relationship humans have to their bodies and pasts. Working across the United States, Switzerland, and the Canary Islands, Bucher forged a practice anchored in familial, cultural, and architectural histories and deeply entwined with contemporary concerns around the boundaries between public and private space, and femininity and the body. Though Bucher’s many bodies of work—from her early drawings and wearable sculptures to her later latex-encased objects and Hauträume—each reflect distinct artistic interests and origins, they all trace back to the artist’s mantra, which uniquely summarizes her career-long engagement with bodies and rooms: Räume sind Hüllen, sind Häute (Spaces are shells, are skins). 
 
Beginning in the 1970s, Heidi Bucher embalmed clothing in a mixture of latex and mother of pearl, preserving the objects as artifacts of their time and creating a surface that appeared skin-like in both color and texture. Bucher primarily used women’s clothing, such as nightdresses and pantyhose, as a critical response to the rigid gender restrictions she had experienced during her childhood and adolescence. By the end of the decade, Bucher began applying her signature latex medium to the surfaces of domestic objects and spaces, aligning women’s clothing with these designated “feminine” spaces. Allowing the latex mixture to harden, then peeling it off, Bucher produced translucent skins that held elements of paint, rust, dirt, and the minute details and markings of the architecture. During the years that followed, Bucher produced several major bodies of work based on the domestic spaces of her past—her ancestral house in Winterthur, the study in her parents’ home, and her studio in Zurich. Each space she inhabited was rendered translucent and ghostly, like a visual memory that, due to the fragile nature of the latex material, would warp and discolor over time. Displayed suspended mid-air, the series of latex Hauträume are simultaneously monumental and fragile, mimicking the very process by which they are created; the removal of the latex from the architectural space required a great deal of both physical strength and delicate dexterity. 
 
Later in her career, Heidi Bucher expanded her practice to engage with public spaces, such as Swiss hotels, government offices, and mental health institutions. Today, her work exists in many surviving drawings, sculptures, and fragments, as well as in the photographs and videos which were often integral to the documentation and even creation of each body of latex works.
 
Heidi Bucher attended the School for Applied Arts in Zurich from 1942 to 1946, specializing in Fashion Design. Solo exhibitions of her work have been organized at Art Sonje Center, Seoul, South Korea (2023); Muzeum Susch, Zernez, Switzerland (2022); Kunstmuseum Bern, Bern, Switzerland (2022); Haus der Kunst, Munich, Germany (2021); Parasol Unit, London, United Kingdom (2018); Swiss Institute of Contemporary Art, New York, NY (2014); Centre Culturel Suisse, Paris, France (2013); Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Zurich, Switzerland (2004); Kunstmuseum Thurgau, Warth-Weiningen, Switzerland (1993); Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), Los Angeles, CA (1972); Musée d’Art Contemporain, Montréal, Canada (1971); and Museum of Contemporary Crafts, New York, NY (1971) among others. Recent group exhibitions featuring her work include Textile Garden, Museum für Gestaltung, Zürich, Switzerland (2022); GIGANTISME — ART & INDUSTRIE, Fonds régional d’art contemporain du Nord-Pas de Calais, Dunkirk, France (2019); Entropy, I write your name, Le Magasin, Grenoble, France (2019); The Psyche as Political Arena, Staatliche Kunsthalle Baden-Baden, Baden-Baden, Germany (2019); In the Shadow of Forward Motion, Zabludowicz Collection, London, United Kingdom (2019); An Intricate Weave, Nottingham Contemporary, Nottingham, United Kingdom (2018); The Everywhere Studio, Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami, FL (2017); Women House, la Monnaie de Paris, Paris, France and National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, D.C. (2017); Viva Arte Viva, 57th Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy (2017); No Place Like Home, Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel (2017); Room, Warwick Arts Centre, Warwick, United Kingdom (2017); and Artists and Architecture, Variable Dimensions, Pavillon de l’Arsenal, Paris, France (2015). 
 
Heidi Bucher’s work is featured in numerous international public and private collections, including Aargauer Kunsthaus, Aarau, Switzerland; Centre Pompidou, Paris, France; Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, CA; The Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel; KADIST Art Foundation, Paris, France and San Francisco, CA;  Kunstmuseum Winterthur, Winterthur, Switzerland; Kunsthaus Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland; Kunstmuseum Bern, Bern, Switzerland; Kunstmuseum Luzern, Lucerne, Switzerland; Muzeum Susch, Zernez, Switzerland; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY; Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Zürich, Switzerland; The Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY; Musée Jenisch Vevey, Vevey, Switzerland; Sammlung Goetz, Munich, Germany; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY; Tate, London, United Kingdom; Zabludowicz Collection, London, United Kingdom.

YAN SHIJIE - BIOGRAPHY

Yan Shijie is the founder, director and curator of the Red Brick Art Museum. Always adhering to the value of ‘academic-oriented,’ he is a pioneer in proposing and implementing the concept of ‘ecological museum experience’ in China. In 2021, he curated the project "Xu Bing : Art Beyond the Kármán Line", which explored the intersection of contemporary art and aerospace technology. He also curated the first solo exhibition in China of the American artist, "James Lee Byars: The Perfect Moment". In 2020 he curated the large international exhibition “2020+”, attempts to open a multi-dimensional space for understanding the pandemic, public crises and social upheavals have blanketed the globe. In 2019 he curated the Sarah Lucas’ largest eponymous solo exhibition in Asia, ‘Sarah Lucas’. In 2018, he curated ‘The unspeakable openness of things’-the largest solo exhibition of Olafur Eliasson in China to date. In the largest Sino-German cultural exchange project in 2017, ‘Deutschland 8-Deutsche Kunst in China’, Yan Shijie as the deputy general curator together with the general curator Fan Di’an and Walter Smerling curated ‘Prologue-German Informel Art’. In 2016, he curated the exhibition ‘Identification Zone: Chinese and Danish Furniture Design’ which was the first design-centered dialogue between Chinese classical furniture and Danish furniture masterpieces.  Other well-received exhibitions curated by Yan Shijie include ‘Izumi Kato’ (2018), ‘Andreas Mühe: Photography’ (2018), ‘Andres Serrano: An American Perspective’ (2017) and ‘Wen Pulin Archive of Chinese Avant-Garde Art of the 80s and 90s’ (2016). The aforementioned exhibitions have constructed deep and multi-dimensional explorations and reflections on contemporary art from various perspectives.

RED BRICK ART MUSEUM
Hegezhuang, Cuigezhuang, Chaoyang District, Beijing 100103

Initial Dates: August 5 – October 8, 2023

19/11/23

Cory Arcangel @ Lisson Gallery, Shanghai – "Errors and Omissions" Exhibition

Cory Arcangel
Errors and Omissions
Lisson Gallery, Shanghai
3 November 2023 – 31 January 2024

Lisson Gallery presents Errors and Omissions, Cory Arcangel’s second show in Shanghai, following his 2019 solo presentation, Topline, at CC Foundation. Constructed as a focused take on a survey show, this exhibition features an array of the artist’s multimedia projects, including video games, single-channel video, inkjets and industrially-coated aluminum ‘paintings’, utilizing techniques such as AI, machine learning and machine code. The show is anchored by two video game works created nearly 20 years apart — Super Slow Tetris (2004), and /roʊˈdeɪoʊ/ Let’s Play: HOLLYWOOD (2021). Super Slow Tetris, an original copy of the Nintendo Entertainment System game Tetris has been hacked and slowed radically so that it now takes almost a whole day for a group of blocks to fall to the bottom of the screen (while crucially still playable). /roʊˈdeɪoʊ/ (pronounced ‘Rodeo’) is another approach to extended game play, but here a bespoke Deep-Q machine-learning super computing system plays a casual, free-to-play Android game called ‘Kim Kardashian: Hollywood,’ where players aim to increase their reputation by gaining fans and A-List celebrity stardom. /roʊˈdeɪoʊ/ Let’s Play: HOLLYWOOD (2021) presented in the Lisson's Shanghai gallery is a 3 hour long single-channel screen capture video of /roʊˈdeɪoʊ/ playing ‘Kim Kardashian: Hollywood,’ recorded on 14 December 2021.

Connecting these works are not only /roʊˈdeɪoʊ/’s ambient system sounds by musician Daniel Lopatin (Oneohtrix Point Never), but a new series, entitled Things I Made, in which various webpages from coryarcangel.com become prints on paper ripped from a HP Deskjet 2710e manual. The prints track the progress of Cory Arcangel’s work over the last two decades and include Photoshop Gradient and Smudge Tool Demonstration (2007) and his Self-Playing Nintendo 64 NBA Courtside 2 (2011).

The show concludes with a ready-made floor installation and a new series of Alus, aluminum paintings featuring abstract shapes and signatures cut by a robotic CNC fibre laser cutting machine with finishes that are reminiscent of Apple’s product lines for both casual and professional users. The lines, curves, and letters have been rendered from vectorized photographs of tracksuits, motifs which have been a long-standing interest of Cory Arcangel’s. Industrially painted in hot pink, each work and its markings are unique. Diamond Plate (2023) utilizes a non-skid, safety surface used for stairs, catwalks, work platforms, walkways and ramps as the backdrop for the exhibition. Notably, the diamond plate pattern was a popular website background in the early days of the internet, and was the background for the artist’s first website (circa 1996). From the ’90s until 2023, Cory Arcangel has weaved and swerved through a career centering contemporary art around ideas of power, digital technology and humor. Errors and Omissions serves as a teaser to Cory Arcangel’s continuing journey. 

CORY ARCANGEL (born 1978, Buffalo, NY), is an artist, composer, curator, and entrepreneur living and working in Stavanger, Norway. Cory Arcangel explores the potential and failures of old and new digital technologies, highlighting their obsolescence, humor, aesthetic attributes and, at times, eerie influence in contemporary life. Applying a semi-archaeological methodology, his practice explores, encodes, and hacks the structural language of video games, software, social media and machine learning — treating them as subject matter and medium. Notable works include Totally Fucked (2003), a hacked Mario Bros game cartridge where Mario is stuck on a cube forever; Permanent Vacation (2008), where two computers are locked in an out of office email loop; Drei Klavierstücke op.11 (2009), in which Arnold Schoenberg’s homonymous 1909 score is plated by editing together YouTube clips of cats playing pianos; Working on my Novel (2009), a compendium of Twitter search results for ‘working on my novel’; Various Self Playing Bowling Games (2011), video games modified to throw gutter balls; Flatware (2018-), a series of abstract ‘paintings’ mounted on Ikea tabletops sourced from a diverse range of leisurewear and, /roʊˈdeɪoʊ/ Let’s Play: HOLLYWOOD (2017-2021), a custom built high performance machine learning computer which plays, as it learns, Kim Kardashian: Hollywood, a free-to-play role-playing Android game. Recent and ongoing projects include ‘Worldbuilding: Gaming and Art in the Digital Age’ at Julia Stoschek Collection, Dusseldorf, Germany and Centre Pompidou Metz, France; ‘I’ll Be Your Mirror: Art and the Digital Screen’, Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, US; ‘Rainbow’ at MUDEC, Milan, Italy and ‘Game Society’ at the National Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art, Seoul, Korea.

Cory Arcangel is the youngest artist since Bruce Nauman to have been given a full floor solo exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (2011). Other exhibitions comprise: ‘Midnight Moment – Another Romp Through the IP’, Times Square, New York, USA (2022), ‘Flying Foxes’, Kunstverein in Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany (2022), ‘Topline’, CC Foundation, Shanghai, China (2019), ‘BACK OFF’, Firstsite, Colchester, Essex, UK (2019), ‘Be the first of your friends’, Espace Louis Vuitton München, Munich, Germany (2015), ‘This is all so crazy, everybody seems so famous’, Galleria d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Bergamo, Italy (2015), ‘All The Small Things’, Reykjavik Art Museum, Reykjavik, Iceland (2015), ‘Masters’, Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, USA (2012–13), ‘Beat the Champ’, Barbican, London, UK (2011), ‘Here Comes Everybody’, Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin, Germany (2010–11) and Nerdzone Version 1, Migros Museum für Gegenwartskunst, Zürich, Switzerland (2005). Cory Arcangel received the Kino der Kunst Award in 2015 and was shortlisted for the Nam June Paik Award in 2014. His work was included in the Whitney Biennial at the Whitney Museum of American Art and the Liverpool Biennial (both 2004). In 2014, he launched Arcangel Surfware, a merchandise and publishing imprint. Its flagship store opened in Stavanger, Norway in 2018.

LISSON GALLERY
2/F, 27 Huqiu Road, Huangpu District, Shanghai

07/11/23

Keiichi Tanaami @ Almine Rech Gallery, Shanghai

Keiichi Tanaami
Almine Rech Gallery, Shanghai
October 27 — December 2, 2023

Almine Rech Shanghai presents KEIICHI TANAAMI's latest presentation with the gallery.
The Pop Art movement, characterized by its enduring global resonance until today, has embarked on a fascinating journey across cultural landscapes worldwide since its origins in 1950s America and Great Britain. The movement flourished in Japan in the late 1950s and early 1960s, melding Western Pop Art sensibilities with distinct Japanese cultural and social contexts. A new generation of Japanese artists embraced the Pop Movement's ethos, driven by a desire to challenge the conventional traditions of Japanese art. This creative awakening was a response to Western materialism and popular culture in postwar Japan.

Keiichi Tanaami (Born 1936 in Tokyo), an influential figure in Japanese Pop Art, stands out among his contemporaries. A hugely prolific artist whose career spans illustration, animation, experimental cinema, and painting, he explains, "My life is not a straight shot with one central theme running through it." His works have been widely exhibited worldwide and have been collected by major international art institutions, such as the New York MoMA, The Art Institute of Chicago, Hong Kong's M+ Museum, Washington's National Portrait Gallery, and the Nationalgalerie im Hamburger Bahnhof in Berlin.

Athena Chen, art researcher
ALMINE RECH SHANGHAI
27 Huqiu Road, 200002 Shanghai

Richard Lin Show Yu Retrospective Exhibition @ Hive Center for Contemporary Art Shanghai

Richard Lin Show Yu
Hive Center for Contemporary Art, Shanghai
November 8 — December 12, 2023

Hive Center for Contemporary Art presents a retrospective of Richard Lin Show Yu at Hive Shanghai. This exhibition is organised by Laura Shao Yiyang, director of International Development at Hive. The exhibition is supported by the Estate of Richard Lin Show Yu, with special recognition to Jean-Claude LIN Lü-Dun, Jean-Pierre LIN Sao Ming, Sumi A R LIN, Katya LIN LODGE, and Malu R J LIN SWAYNE. This retrospective focuses on Richard Lin Show Yu’s significant works from the 1950s to the 1980s. It is Richard Lin’s first major exhibition at a gallery in mainland of China, also his second time showing at Hive, following the 2015 major exhibition of Chinese abstractionists, The Boundaries of Order.
It is a very daunting task to write about Richard Lin Show Yu. This prologue represents a distillation of my own reflections, regarding key aspects of his work experienced as a childhood bystander observer and later musings over the decades. Where possible, within the limitations of this brief account I draw upon archival sources within the Richard Lin Show Yu Estate Archive as pertinent illustrations. For the most part I am attempting to create an image of ideas and influences supporting his creative energy. The Estate of Richard LIN Show Yu would like to thank Hive Center for Contemporary Art, and in particular Laura Shao Yiyang, Director of International Development, and her team, for this exhibition. It has been a pleasure to collaborate with Hive.

Childhood and adolescence for Richard Lin Show Yu was marked by a succession of educational displacements including an early childhood period in a Japanese household; late adolescence boarding in Hong Kong to attend the Diocesan Boys’ School and then boarding at Millfield School in Somerset, UK. In these childhood years away from home, a lasting love for music, singing along to Chinese Classical Opera contributed to the building of a protective inner sanctuary that would later accompany his most creative and productive all-night sessions of painting and constructing in the studio.

If the language of architecture in post-war London taught RLSY about function, space and form, surely calligraphy physically educated his eye and hand to deliver the faultless proportions and spacing with his elegant cursive calligraphy from a young age. Another important influence was growing up in a complex of traditional Chinese compound houses. Freehand architectural sketches, some with water colour washes, notably of the city of Bayeux and its cathedral pre-figure the later and much larger major ‘Dark Sun’ series. Spanning 1933-1958, as a member of Artists International Association (A.I.A), a number of RLSY contemporary works are displayed alongside Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque, Joan Miro, and many others invited to celebrate the A.IA 25th anniversary.

The atmospheric suns and moons, clouds and forests, deep bold colours ebbing and flowing and bleeding into each other, some of epic dimensions-the ‘old masters’-of his Gimpel Fils days followed by later geometric coalescence into sharp-edged shapes and polished surfaces leading to his multimedia ‘constructivist’ works of canvas, paint, metal and Perspex and the ‘many colours of white’ defining the Marlborough Gallery epoch. Mathematical conceptual frameworks recurred in conversations about structural relationships and proportion, including the geometry of the Golden Mean and the irrational number √2 i.e. the length of a diagonal to a 1×1 square. These mathematical ideas influenced Richard Lin Show Yu’s aesthetics of intervals and the relationships of one space with another. Contemporaneous to his ‘constructivist’ works and in complete contrast are the ‘gestural’ studies comprising instantaneous works of squeezed oil-paint tubes onto stiff glossy paper placed on the floor, literally creating a work in the moment and with great energy or ‘Chi’ in RLSY’s words resulting in neo-calligraphic expressions.

‘The decision is more important than the incision’: a surgical maxim which applies precisely to incision ‘drawing’ but as with gestural works, Richard Lin Show Yu worked slowly to construct his white and mixed media works. By contrast the gestural incision and more classically graphic works depended on rapid spontaneous accuracy. He used an opportunistic economy of time and materials to determine his next works which depended on varying temporal characteristics at different stages of fruition, planning on the blank pages of old catalogues or envelopes. He is said to have worked with multimedia, but the medium he used most was ‘Time’.

Jean-Pierre LIN Sao Ming林少明
London, UK, 14.10.23
HIVE CENTER FOR CONTEMPORARY ART | SHANGHAI
First Trust Co.Building, Beijing East Road No.270, 200000, Huangpu District, Shanghai