Group Exhibition Curated by Gao Minglu Opens at Contrasts Gallery
April 30, 2010 by All Art News
Filed under Art Events & Exhibitions
SHANGHAI.- Contrasts Gallery will present Maximalism in Contrasts, an exhibition curated by Gao Minglu that will feature work by Zhu Jinshi, Zhang Yu, Lei Hong and He Xiangyu. The exhibition will be open to the public April 30th – June 17th at Contrasts Gallery, No 181 Middle Jiangxi Road, g/f, Shanghai, China.
The focus of the exhibition is Maximalism, the philosophical core of Chinese abstract art. Maximalism places an emphasis on the spiritual experience of the artist in the process of creation. Its primary objective is to question and overthrow assumptions about the meaning of art. This exhibition is in keeping with Contrasts Gallery’s mission to present art influenced by Chinese literature and art theory.
In Maximalist theory, the meaning of a painting is not expressed by its surface or subject matter and a painting is not considered a unique and privileged product of human culture containing commonly held values of virtue and creativity. According to Maximalists, the meaning of art goes beyond language (yan bu jin yi) and comes from a dialogue between the artist and the material object, a response to the rapidly changing material world.
While the work in the exhibition is similar in appearance to modern or conceptual art, it has a different theoretical foundation. Most Maximalist artists consider their work to be incomplete and fragmented records of daily meditation. They do not adhere to compositional principles or ideas; their art is natural, repetitious and fragmentary. The work functions as what is often called a liushui zhang in Chinese, literally, “an account book of streaming water,” which means an everyday record of something that is extremely unimportant, micro-trivial and fragmented from daily life.
The artists included in Maximalism in Contrasts:
Zhu Jinshi
Zhu has devoted himself to abstract painting for three decades. His installation work often involves Chinese rice paper (xuan zhi) and ink. His installation, “Soaking”, is a metal container full with ink and xuan paper. The paper is placed half in the ink and half above the ink. The top part of the paper will gradually turn dark giving the audience a chance to observe the process of painting without human involvement. In addition, there are also few of Zhu’s abstract painting in the exhibition, which have his diary and notes on the back.
Zhang Yu
For more than two decades, Zhang Yu has used random fingerprints, universal marks of identification, to make “ink paintings” on scrolls. By turning a symbol of human identification into a repetitious “abstract” mark, Zhang Yu’s fingerprints lose their traditional symbolic meaning and are transformed into universal symbols of beauty and infinity. Every touch is a dialogue with nature.
He Xiangyu
He Xiangyu uses crystallized Coco Cola as ink for painting and calligraphy. This process transforms an industrial, commercial product into spontaneous literati expressionism. Xiangyu’s art also imbues the process of mass reproduction with the spiritual quality of self-meditation.
Lei Hong
Lei Hong makes pencil drawings composed of dots, lines and squares that have certain characteristics of Western abstract paintings but not the rational structural elements. Instead Lei Hong’s drawings reveal a spirit of humanism. The dots and lines are not conceptual, but marks that relate to traditional Chinese ink painting. One can be reminded of a “line of flying wild geese,” “chanting on a returning fishing boat at dusk,” and the “lonely smoke in the great desert” from his drawings. His marks suggest a narrative about his imagination and his feelings at a given moment.
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