What about sculpture?
June 7, 2007- July 19, 2007
Reception: June 7, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
210 11th Ave
Chambers Fine Art is pleased to announce the opening on June 7th of What about sculpture?
Four years after the exhibition Alors, la Chine? held at the Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris posed this question about general developments in the world of contemporary art in China, the current exhibition focuses on sculpture which has had considerably less exposure than oil painting, video and photography. In part this is because fewer artists in the 1990s found three-dimensional expression to be suitable for the exploration of the social issues that were of such importance during this period. Since Chinese art of this period was all about breaking down barriers, however, many artists who started life as calligraphers, performance artists or photographers have found themselves irresistibly drawn to sculpture and the making of objects.
Included in the exhibition are works by
Ai Weiwei,
Zheng Guogu,
Liu Jianhua,
Zhang Huan,
Shi Jinsong,
Song Dong,
Yin Xiuzhen, and
Wang Tiande, none of whom with the exception of
Shi Jinsong, would consider sculpture to be their primary medium. Without question, however, these versatile artists have produced some of the most provocative sculpture to have been produced in China in the last decade.
The human figure is only represented in fragmentary form by
Zhang Huan’s Buddha Finger and United Hands by
Song Dong and
Yin Xiuzhen. Deeply moved by the destruction of cultural and religious assets in Tibet,
Zhang Huan has created a series of monumental enlargements of sculptural fragments as memorials to this tragic loss. In their charmingly home-spun homage to their mutual attachment,
Song Dong and
Yin Xiuzhen use casts of their own hands, each holding a chopstick and supporting a miniature DVD screen documenting a bicycle ride around their neighborhood.
The sculptures of
Shi Jinsong,
Zheng Guogu and
Wang Tiande represent objects rather than the human form.
Shi Jinsong transforms well known logos into fearsome-looking implements in his Secret Book of Cool Weapons while
Zheng Guogu and
Wang Tiande use the form of the bottle for entirely different purposes. Trained in Chinese painting,
Wang Tiande uses the form of the bottle as a sculptural support for layers of ink-soaked xuan paper. This contrasts dramatically with the group of twelve metal bottles by
Zheng Guogu who first came to prominence in through the spontaneous style of his documentation of the youth culture of the small provincial city of Yangjiang where he lives. The permanence of these mundane objects, predicted to oxidize over a period of 2000 years, contrast with the ephemeral quality of urban life today.
Liu Jianhua and
Ai Weiwei are both inspired by the long history of ceramics in Chinese history.
Liu Jianhua was trained in Jingdezhen, the most important ceramic production in China with a history of over 2000 years. In Regular/Fragile he has moved away from the colorful, decorative appearance of his earlier work in favor of a monochromatic palette and imagery that recalls the excesses of European Baroque.
Ai Weiwei rediscovered classical Chinese art when he returned to Beijing from New York in 1994. With his Duchampian sensibility, however, he questions while he admires, covering authentic Neolithic pots with brightly colored paint in Colored Vases and recreating a ruyi, a traditional Chinese auspicious symbol, as a colorful recreation of the human intestinal system.
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | map | | Gallery | Chambers Fine Art | | Address | 210 11th Ave, 4th Fl New York (Chelsea) NY, 10001 United States | | Phone | 212-414-1169 | | Fax | 212-414-1169 | | Hours | Tue-Sat 10-6 (Summer hours: Mon-Fri 10-6) | |
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