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Contemporary

Contemporary | He Jing – “Made In China”

The phrase “Made In China” is synonymous with cheap, knockoff copies of major brands in fashion,
technology, furniture and numerous other industries.
Recent headlines have even gone so far as to warn
Kickstarter users to prepare to have their ideas stolen before they’re funded. The open-source manufacturing culture in the country means that thousands of small and major production operations.It could spot an idea online and begin mass producing cheaper, near-identical copies of the idea. So what
does this mean for the Chinese creative? Is there room for original design in an economy driven by the cheap cost of reproduction? It’s what Design Academy Eindhoven graduate Jing He calls the “Chinese identity crisis”. Her MA project, The Tulip Pyramid in an attempt to unpack some of the complexities of the Chinese creative scene.

Chinese identity crisis

Tulip Pyramid in Frans Hals Museum, Harlem, NL

As a Chinese designer, she is frequently asked whether her work reflects her Chinese identity. She wondered: What dose that mean? What is Chinese design? And in what way does it differ from design made by people with other nationalities? 

Tulip Pyramid, He Jing, 2016

China has undergone fast economic growth in the past 30 years, and the quick changing of life and culture triggered a crisis of identity. Large factories producing counterfeits of ‘original’ designs are in large part responsible for China’s economic growth. She researched the historical, political, economic and cultural reasons behind the phenomenon of copying in China. Considering that the design profession is one of creativity, it should not come as a surprise that Chinese designers are sensitive to the subject of copying;

It supposedly conflicts with the creativity of the profession.As such. Chinese designers are facing the fact that a large amount of counterfeits have been produced in China are left questioning their identity. In a mass-production industry, copying is an important method, thus people need intellectual property laws to protect their investment and profits.

Tulip Pyramid, He Jing, 2016

Think for instance aboutthe ongoing legal and cultural conflict between Joyme and IKEA. Or the Chinese acquisition of the Bauhaus collection, in an attempt to transform ‘Made in China’ to ‘Designed in China’. To understand the significance of copying in China, despite any critical connotation that might arise, herself, as a designer.She try to incorporate this reality in her work.

What is identity for He Jing?

To answer these questions, I started with a general question: What is identity? I think that one’s identity cannot be separated from where and how one is raised . I question the notion of identity in the system of capitalism, where one’s identity probably consists of a collection of products.

Thousands of mass products and advertisements are designed to encourage people to purchase the commodities that match many sorts of designed identities. Thus in design, what does ‘Chinese’ mean? Is it a sort of flavor, taste, style or commercial strategy?

Tulip Pyramid, He Jing, 2016

As China grew to be the world’s second-largest economy, counterfeiting became an important subject. In recent decades, products that are manufactured in China are familiar in daily life all over the world. But ‘Made in China’ also means ‘cheap’ and ‘low-quality’. Added to this is a huge amount of products that have been produced in China without the label of ‘Made in China’. And these are considered ‘fakes’.

But how to define ‘fake’? Is copying always a negative word? Can a designer learn from copies and fakes, while still finding the practice somewhat deplorable? She believes facing the confusion of her cultural background is an important step to assess her identity as an individual designer; a design method may come from the careful observation of the chaos.

Therefore, she believes that one’s identity reflects where and how one grew up, and she wants to learn from the phenomenon of copying in China instead of denying it. She aims for a design method inspired by the practice of copying in Chinese culture. In the last Chapter, she describes her own design proposal where she take copying and being copied as a natural process and create an opportunity to copy the project itself. Although the project is not a famous design that will be copied by others. Copying has already taken place inside this design project: A Tulip Pyramid created and transformed by the practice of copying.

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Contemporary 人物 当代 艺术家

Contemporary | Zhao Qi: like works

The Chinese art

Artist: Zhao Qi

zhao qi Born in Jin County, Liaoning Province in 1954
He currently works and lives in Beijing

zhao qi would like to call these paintings on small notebooks works. Therefore, this point is emphasized because according to custom. We often call this type of painting “studio”, or shorthand or something like that. What zhao qi don’t understand is, why can’t sketches and sketches be placed in the exhibition halls of art museums such as Chinese paintings, oil paintings and prints?

Zhao Qi work

Outside of zhao qi understanding of painting, I think the work is a kind of narrative and the painter expresses his ideas through the painting. Although these paintings on small books are not “formal” like the works on display, their essence is still something thoughtful.

These paintings are random, sometimes standing, sometimes sitting, sometimes leaning against where. This way, I can see that when I painted. I must have been moved by the image in front of me. Yes, these images are painted in front of the object, it is not an imagination from nothing. ——This is different from other jobs, right?

——All the works are sent with feelings. suddenly I feel wrong to tell this fact. Because some images are also boring when I hold a pen and first draw carelessly. When painting, the picture looks interesting. Painting is indeed a very magical act, we cannot know where the end of the brush is attached.

Contemporary art usually refers to art that has innovated and subverted existing norms in the fields of oil painting, sculpture, and printmaking since China implemented economic reforms in 1979 and opened to the outside world, including photography. Installation.Concept.Performance. Video. Multimedia and other new art forms . The Chinese art circle regards an art exhibition in 1979 as the beginning of Chinese contemporary art history.

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Contemporary

Contemporary | Miao Ying ’s promotional showrooms

In an increasingly digital world. Where facial recognition apps allegedly store our aged portraits and smart devices eavesdrop on our most intimate conversations. A growing number of artists are presenting tech-inspired dystopias in their work. New York and Shanghai-based Miao Ying adds an even more bitter cherry on top of this potential, doom-filled future, with her commentary on drastic governmental Internet censoring, and eventual self-censorship, in her home country of China. “Self-censorship is similar to Stockholm Syndrome,” says the artist.

Miao Ying last decade

However about becoming frenemies with censorship over the last decade, since she graduated from graduate school. “I never read George Orwell’s 1984 because I live in it and it’s pretty dark already.

Miao YiMiao Ying, I haven’t closed google chrome in 3 years
Miao Ying, I haven't closed google chrome in 3 years
Miao Ying, I haven’t closed google chrome in 3 years

Gif works

It’s easy to think censoring is wrong—few would argue with that.But the artist has been practicing ways of working with it. While playfully bending the rules. Miao showed a GIF of a half-loaded image of Chairman Mao as part of her mixed media installation Chinternet . Plus in the group exhibition The New Normal: China, Art, and 2017 at Beijing’s UCCA Center for Contemporary Art. The cultural bureau, during one of their usual trips to institutions to eliminate “threat”. Deemed the work inappropriate because of the clear resemblance of the former leader’s forehead. The artist’s solution was to raise the image’s pixilation to such a degree of unclarity that she was able to exhibit the work. Which was about China’s economy slowly getting stuck in a manner similar to a buffering image.

Miao Ying, Chinternet Plus (detail), 2016. Courtesy the artist
Miao Ying, Chinternet Plus (detail), 2016. Courtesy the artist

Miao’s mixed media installations—or promotional showrooms, as she calls them—bring her web art pieces into the gallery space, but exist almost secondary to her work in the digital realm. For Miao, her work strictly “resides online” and physical installations . She has started showing at museums result from an outside demand to prompt the audience to go to the Internet. “The work always starts with a digital core, which relates to a communist ideology. Starting with an abstract vision and adding up to build an idea.” 

Miao Ying, data
Miao Ying, data

Miao Ying Grey Area

“There has always been a grey area to play with; however, that area is constantly getting narrower,” explains the artist. Who believes the current digital-political landscape has reached new realms of horror. With an in-progress credit system to collect personal data, similar to the purchase-based credit system of online shopping platform Taobao. Which grants visa-free access to Canada or Singapore for those holding the desired score. A pilot programme is currently being tested on smaller cities. The new deductive system gives each citizen 1,000 points, which drop based on their online and real-life presence. Monitored through governing web companies and people observing and noting others’ public behaviours. “The plan is to have each Chinese citizen scored by 2020.” says Miao, adding that a low score will limit travel and access to certain benefits.

Miao Ying, Happily Contained (detail), 2018. Courtesy the artist
Miao Ying, Happily Contained (detail), 2018. Courtesy the artist

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Contemporary 艺术家

Contemporary|Kang Jianfei: reconcile with myself

reconcile with myself

When kang Jian fei was young, kang Jian feiwas looking forward to the New Year. When kang Jian fei grew up, kang Jian fei was really afraid of the New Year. If summarize the reasons for the fear, there will be more. The most core thing think is because of the fear of time. Generally speaking, a pessimist, and there are so many things kang Jian fei can’t figure out. The world in my mind is different. kang Jian fei like wine, and kang Jian Fei like to drink by myself. When kang Jian fei am drunk, kang Jian fei can see the imaginary world more clearly. That is the other me, maybe that is the real me. I’m more and more afraid of drinking with others, afraid that kang Jian fei can’t control my drunk self and hurt others. kang Jian fei always want to gain insight into the secrets of the world, never believe in established rules, and always feel that there is an invisible line connecting the world.

forward to the New Year

When I was young, I was looking forward to the New Year. When I grew up, I was really afraid of the New Year. If I summarize the reasons for the fear, there will be more. The most core thing I think is because of the fear of time. Generally speaking, I am a pessimist, and there are so many things I can’t figure out. The world in my mind is different. I like wine, and I like to drink by myself. When I am drunk, I can see the imaginary world more clearly. That is the other me, maybe that is the real me. I’m more and more afraid of drinking with others, afraid that I can’t control my drunk self and hurt others. always want to gain insight into the secrets of the world, never believe in established rules, and always feel that there is an invisible line connecting the world.

A child

When was a child, there were not many words from teachers who could remember when was in school. One sentence was said by the head teacher. have to break the casserole and ask to the end, so that have adhered to this principle for many years. If you are facing a math problem, it must be right, but it doesn’t seem to be a good way to face life and society. Seeking truth is an attitude, and the method of seeking truth is self-continuous thinking and practice, but don’t touch society with a truth-seeking attitude. It seems too hypocritical. Some problems will not be solved until many years later. Otherwise, let it go, let it go!reconcile with myself.

If life is a stage

If life is a stage, then each of us must become a certain role. When you are watched, you are an actor, and acting is almost your destiny. There is no permanent banquet in the world, and there is no drama that can be performed endlessly. Before time, everything is a temporary. I believe reconcile with myself in determinism and the alternate causality, just like the sun rising east Xiluo is purely natural.

But all people will pursue the meaning of life, especially these sentimental and awkward artists who draw pictures for meaning, put urinals in art museums for meaning, and even peeing is also in pursuit of meaning. Perhaps the most meaningless part for others is the ultimate meaning pursued by the artist. In the face of time, the meaning will be dispelled, will gradually change, and will be reborn into a new meaning. Freud divided me into id, ego, and superego, but whether it is desire, consciousness, or morality, it still revolves around “I”, who am I? Who is me again?

believe in the laws of the world, reconcile with myself,and that the greatest joy in life is inner peace. Therefore, at the end of this year, I choose to reconcile with myself.

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Contemporary 当代

Contemporary | Yuan Yuan – Architectural paintings

Chinese artist Yuan Yuan is known on the international art scene thanks to his distinctive paintings, focused on architectural subjects and executed with impeccable technique. They convey a unique atmosphere, that is materialized in the poetic of memory. 

Yuan Yuan, Confessionary II, 2013, oil on linen
Confessionary II, 2013, oil on linen

Zheijang hometown

Yuan Yuan born in 1973 in Zhejiang province and studied in the Oil Painting Department of the China Academy of Art in Hangzhou. Where he gained a graduation in Fine Arts in 1996 and a Master in Fine Arts in 2008. When YuanYuan was studying there, while Chinese society was still very conservative. The Academy was “like a sunroof, always open for us” . And he benefited from a library well stocked with foreign periodicals. Currently lives and works in Hangzhou and Berlin.

His work is heavily influenced by traditional Chinese painting, which she studied when he was a secondary school student. Also, the painter was inspirited by Western artist such as Richard Long (Land Art) and Felix Gonzalez-Torres (Conceptual Art).  

Yuan Yuan, Breakfast, 2013, oil on canvas.
Breakfast, 2013, oil on canvas.

YuanYuan subjects are mainly interiors and these are based on real places, with some imaginary elements added. Sometimes he also manipulates architectural details and as a result the scenes . He depicts seem to lie somewhere between reality and illusion. 

All Yuan Yuan’s paintings share a sense of abandonment, offering just a glimpse of their former glory.

The artist said

“Ruins give us a sense of security, they are living spaces without .A sense of pressure so you can do whatever you want. Abandoned places are also public, meaning that you may enter and visit. This is similar to the process of a viewer who is looking at an artwork. I am trying my best to identify the residual traces left behind – not so much what the place has now.But rather what this place used to be for a long time, which no one can take away and cannot be seen. “

Yuan Yuan, A Home for Home, 2012, oil on canvas
YuanYuan, A Home for Home, 2012, oil on canvas
Yuan Yuan, Fairy Dream Liner 3, 2008, oil on canvas
YuanYuan, Fairy Dream Liner 3, 2008, oil on canvas

Paintings composition are highly structured and orderly, dictated by the geometric details of the   architecture depicted.  what sets Yuan Yuan’s paintings is the incredible detail with which he describes every individual surface within the composition. In particular, She is fascinated by mosaics and patterns of tiles, whether on floors, walls, or lining pools and showers.

He is able to play with an infinite variety of hues within the same color scheme to produce a stunning effect. The atmosphere often feels humid in his paintings, with water in pools or dripping from .the ceiling or decaying walls, and the mood is melancholy. In order to achieve the effect of wet surfaces, he applies several layers of diluted pigment. A classical Chinese painting technique.  

Yuan Yuan, Meteoric Water, 2011, acrylic on canvas
Yuan Yuan, Meteoric Water, 2011, acrylic on canvas
Yuan Yuan, Swimming Pool II, 2010, oil on canvas
Yuan Yuan, Swimming Pool II, 2010, oil on canvas

At first glance, Yuan Yuan’s paintings seem devoid of any human presence. This is not quite true. She wants to represent people by depicting traces of human activity, which heighten our curiosity. 

Thus, She also conveys a sense of passing time, of transition and history. 

Yuan Yuan, Mirror, 2011, oil on canvas
Mirror, 2011, oil on canvas

For more Chinese art: Abgstage01

***

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Contemporary

Contemporary | Lin Yilin through performance

Biography

Born in Guangzhou in 1964, Guangdong Province, China, Lin Yilin studied sculpture at the Guangzhou Academy of Fine Arts, graduating in 1987. Lin Yilin through performance found his way to think about present.

His poetics are expressed through urban interventions and site specific performances. It draws on China’s socio-economic conditions, political landscape and cultural experiences; reinvents the relationships between communities and environments in a globalized context.

Lin Yilin through performance uses his experiences as an immigrant to the United States as a starting point for many of his works.

Lin Yilin during a performance

Safely Manuevering across Linhe Road

Lin became known for his installations made with stackable bricks inserted in an urban context, thanks also to his involvement in the Big Tail Elephant Working Group, which founded in 1990 was fundamental for a reflection on the state of China’s urban development. Lin’s best-known work is in fact “Safely Manuevering across Linhe Road” (1995), where the artist moved a pile of bricks across a main road in Guangzhou for ninety minutes. He built a brick wall on the side of the road and then removed it row by row and reassembled it in the middle of the street. Repeating the same gesture, he brought the wall across the street. This performance turned a stable wall into a moving wall and also stopped heavy traffic.

safely manuering
Lin Yilin performing “Safely Maneuvering across Line Road”

Symbolically, the brick for Lin is linked to architectural construction and destruction, it also indicates urbanization and social transformation. The artist intervened on a public site with his body and represented the rapid urbanization which we easily forget despite being very evident.


For other contemporary artists: Contemporary

From:

Apersonaldiary

Guggenheim

Artsy

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Contemporary 当代

Contemporary | Wang Ruilin – “Dreams”

Surreal animal sculptures by Wang Ruilin 

In the serie titled “Dreams”, Chinese sculptor Wang Ruilin creates surreal animals with a particular  features: on their backs – and sometimes on their antlers – these creatures carry monumental elements of nature like lakes and mountain cliffs. It’s like a modern animal-version of Noah’s Arc without people.  

“Dreams Ark1”, Wang Ruilin
“Dreams Ark1”, Wang Ruilin
“Dreams Floating1”, Wang Ruilin
“Dreams Floating1”, Wang Ruilin

Wang Ruilin is a talented Chinese sculptor, born in 1985 in Anshan, in province of Liaoning. He graduated at the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing in 2005 and  actually lives and works in the same city. 

Rui Sculpture Life

His sculptures are heavily influenced by traditional Chinese art and mythology. Indeed, his life changed at the age of four or five, when he encountered . a painting of a horse by the artist Xu Beihong (1895-1953). A traditional Chinese painter, primarily known for his ink paintings of horses and birds. Ruilin became obsessed with these vigorous animal and has ever since identified with it.

Horses became one of the main characters of Ruilin’s works, resulting in the series “Horse. Play”, where pours the lively power of the animal in different static postures, creating significant tensions in the sculptures. 

“Horse. Play”, Wang Ruilin
“Horse. Play”, Wang Ruilin
“Dreams Horse”, Wang Ruilin
“Dreams Horse”, Wang Ruilin

“Dreams” series are almost life-sized copped sculptures .And the artist describes their creative process as digging deep into his heart and excavating works that originally exist from various experiences.

About his works, Ruilin says:

“Pursuit of Dreamscomes from my imagination, which is the balance between nature and abnormal state. Animals in Pursuit of Dreams may not be lifelike for I wish to inject different spiritualities and. spirits of the east and remind people to focus and admire on . other individuals who are the same or even more beautiful besides themselves only. Pursuit of Dreams-ark is the work I was inspired in the moment of 2012 . when people were concerning on how to be saved and I make ark to save not only rivers and mountains of human. In the space of impermanent compounds, what we pursue may not exist really and we can only feel the value and force. of life when the doom is set. Just as the big fish that I compare to ark, it carries mountains and rivers with life and . observes the world with the soul”

“Dreams Ark2”, Wang Ruilin
“Dreams Ark2”, Wang Ruilin
Wang Ruilin working on “Horse. Play
Ruilin working on “Horse. Play”

Eastern-classical art also influenced Ruilin use of color.In particular he loves Chinese flower paintings . for their rich, bright and cool colors. For the artist eyes they seem deep, pure and full of profoundness and uniqueness. 

The series “Dreams” was protagonist of ART Beijing in 2014.  

“Dreams Yak”, Wang Ruilin
“Dreams Yak”, Wang Ruilin
“Dreams Floating2”, Wang Ruilin
“Dreams Floating2”, Wang Ruilin
Wang Ruiling creating a sculpture
Ruilin creating a sculpture

For more Chinese art: Abgstage01

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Contemporary 当代 纵观艺术 艺术家

Contemporary| Zhou Jun – The Thick Red Line

Zhou Jun is a contemporary conceptual chinese photographer. He was born in Nanjing Province in 1965 and graduated from Nanjing Normal University in 1990.

His work revolves around construction sites and the relationship between urbanization and the preservation of ancient cultural inheritance.

Zhou Jun
Zhou Jun

Zhou Jun’s technique

The artist is best known for his series – Scaffoldings; Bird’s Nest project; The Red and the Black – featuring Chinese cities in black and white with overlays of red streamers wrapped around under-construction buildings. Zhou Jun uses large format film cameras to produce negatives, which are scanned, digitally manipulated and printed to produce large unframed photographic works. Built environment is the subject of Zhou’s work in an analysis of China’s rapid and sometimes brutal redevelopment. Created since 1992, his photographs mainly treat the conflicting relationships between Chinese traditional architecture and contemporary buildings while continuously challenging the symbolic nature of the red color.

9th 2007, 2007, Digital C - print, 120 x 190 cm/180 x 286 cm
9th 2007, 2007, Digital C – print, 120 x 190 cm/180 x 286 cm
Expo 2010 Shanghai - China Pavillion, 2009, Digital C - print, 120 x 150 cm/220 x 180 cm
Expo 2010 Shanghai – China Pavillion, 2009, Digital C – print, 120 x 150 cm/220 x 180 cm

Building progress

The contradictions that are presented when trying to preserve the past in a time of China’s unprecedented economic growth underpin the work of Zhou Jun. During the last thirty years the most striking feature of China’s re-development has been its city construction. Demolition of whole villages to make way for high-rise development is a regular occurrence. The lead up to the 2008 Beijing Olympics saw massive building works and although it transformed Beijing into a modern city entire neighborhoods were ‘moved on’ in the name of progress.

Bird's Nest No. 2, 2006, Digital C - print, 50 x 60 cm/120 x 150 cm
Bird’s Nest No. 2, 2006, Digital C – print, 50 x 60 cm/120 x 150 cm

Zhou Jun’s work embodies a quality of yearning for the past to some extent and this is seen in his photographs of historic buildings from Beijing. He is acutely aware of the expansion of Chinese cities and the loss of traditional architecture. It is the loss of Chinese culture in the pursuit of globalisation.

Phoenix Ancient City, 2011, Digital C - print, 120 x 150 cm/180 x 220 cm
Phoenix Ancient City, 2011, Digital C – print, 120 x 150 cm/180 x 220 cm

Seeing red

The color red has significance in Chinese cultural memory as it is used for ceremonial occasions such as weddings but it also represents revolutionary communist ideology. It is a reminder of the turmoil of the recent past. Because of this, the wide variety of perspectives of each person means completely different feelings and reactions are aroused by the color red. The partnership between the black and white photographs and the red sections of scaffolding allows the audience to produce their own meanings.

“Hanging Red”, 2009, 120 x 150 cm, Archival Inkjet Print on Fine Art Paper
“Hanging Red”, 2009, 120 x 150 cm, Archival Inkjet Print on Fine Art Paper

A word from the author

“The three decades of development China is experiencing – building to a crescendo with the Olympics – are unparalleled in history. The colour red, which I use to highlight specific parts of the photograph, can elicit different responses in people from different countries or cultures – at times, it can even have opposite meanings for people. I want my work to be interpreted differently by people depending on their response to the symbolic meaning of red. In this sense, the work has the potential to reveal international perspectives to common subject matter.”

Zhou Jun also creates sculptural works using porcelain and other materials, always mantaining his distinctive style and his conceptual structure.

A
A “wounded” porcelain vase, surrounded by scaffoldings

For more informations about Zhou Jun’s work: https://www.redgategallery.com/Artists/Zhou_Jun-photography/index.html

or: http://www.artlinkart.com/en/artist/wrk_yr/dbabrws/1eccAtt/2006

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Contemporary 当代 纵观艺术 艺术家

Contemporary | Li Xiaofeng – Porcelain Heart

Li Xiaofeng is a Chinese sculptor and fashion designer, born in 1965 in Hubei. His unique work consists in wearable porcelain clothes.

He graduated at the Central Academy of Fine Arts (CAFA)’s Mural Department, and began his activity as a muralist. Then he began specializing in sculpture in order to explore new concepts and expressive forms to apply to the Chinese contemporary artistic scene.

Li Xiaofeng
Li Xiaofeng

His sculpture-clothing project is truly original, both for the selected material and the idea of wearable “pieces of armor” that recall Chinese traditional works.

Li Xiaofeng’s creative process

Li Xiaofeng researches and collects fragments of ancient Chinese porcelain recovered from archaeological excavations, dating back to the Yuan, Ming and Qing dynasties: he models and polishes them and punctures them, then sews them together on a leather undergarment through a silver thread, creating a “porcelain fabric”. His meticulous work is a bridge between past and present and a sharp reflection on the concept of culture. 

porcelain dress 1
These dresses are fully wearable
porcelain dress 2

Li’s Rearranged landscapes

“Chinese culture” is the basic breakthrough point in Li’s works: he feels a sense of mission for its study and he channels it all in what he calls “Post Orientalism”. Landscape was always a major theme in his large number of paintings created in the past but, instead of simply copying like some other contemporary artists, he had always the urge to rearrange it, in a dynamic dialogue with history. 

This extract explains the reason why Li Xiaofeng’s calls his porcelain clothes “rearranged landscapes”:

“Since the time when it was the Mongol Yuan capital Khanbalik to the present day, Beijing has initiated its largest excavation projects of all time and, like a blue snake that has been hibernating for a millennium, the city is now stirring and shedding its old skin. It greedily emerges through the towering buildings, twisting free from the historical sediment of its ancient civilization. Blue-and-white porcelain shards that represent this civilization are unearthed in large quantities at the same time. These blue shards, bathed in the sunny skies of socialism and caressed by the contemporary cool breezes blowing from the west throughout the capital, assume a bewildering array of postures as fashion items entering the new century!

Xi Liaofeng at work
Xi Liaofeng at work

Among his works are women’s dresses, t-shirts and men’s jackets. His first piece in wearable porcelain fragments was “Beijing Memories”, a Mao suit.

MIlitary uniform
MIlitary uniform

Lacoste’s porcelain shirt Li XiaoFeng

In 2010 the world-renowned brand Lacoste commissioned Li Xiaofeng a porcelain polo shirt for men and women for the Holiday Collector series. Unfortunately, a problem occurred: the PRC prohibits the export of ancient artifacts, including old porcelain shards.

Despite that, the artist did not give up and realized the porcelain himself, with the crocodile’s logo attached, and tore it apart only to recompose it into a Polo shirt, one of the most expensive and exclusive items ever sold by Lacoste.

Lacoste's porcelain shirt-sculpture
Lacoste’s porcelain shirt-sculpture

The artist also released a limited edition polo shirt, choosing blue and white fragments depicting the lotus flower and drawings of newborns from the Kangxi period and the Qing dynasty. The lotus flower represents rebirth and purity while newborns represent fertility. In that period the mortality rate among children was high and this type of decoration was in great demand in the hope of being a blessing for children.

“Porcelain shards” polo shirt

Li Xiaofeng’s main expositions

2019Dreaming of Crafts of the Future: Mongyudowon Unfolds, 11th Cheongju Craft Biennale 2019, Culture Factory C, Cheongju
2018Cracked – Porcelain, Red Gate Gallery
 2D vs 3D, Red Gate Gallery
 798, We Are Back, Red Gate Gallery
2017Red Gate on the Move, Red Gate Gallery
 Contemporary Dialogues Between Fashion and Art, Zhu Zhong Art Museum
 The Silk Road and Celestial Clothes, Taimiao Art Museum
 Fusion – The International Exhibition of Contemporary Ceramic Art, Art Museum of Nanjing University of the Arts, Nanjing
2016Red Gate: The Next 25 Years, Red Gate Gallery
2015China: Through the Looking GlassThe Metropolitan Museum of Art, USA
20145th Tanwan Ceramics Biennale, Taipei County Yingge Ceramics Museum, Tanwan
 ST. Start International exhibition of the Chinese Contemporary Ceramic Art, Today Art Museum, Beijing
20137th Gyeonggi International Ceramic Biennale 2013 Korea, Icheon CeraMIX Creative Center, Korea
2011Ming to Nirvana, Red Gate Gallery
2010Head On, Red Gate Gallery
 Width Contemporary Art Exhibition, Museum of Contemporary Art, Beijing
2008Virginia Miller Gallery, Miami
 Asian Contemporary Art Fair, New York
2006Sculpture, Pickled Art Centre
 Consumption Times I, Ha Te Art Centre
2005Diversity and Construction, Beijing
2004X Yard, Beijing
 Beijing International Art Camp
2002CAFA Graduates’ Exhibition

For more informations about Li Xiaofeng’s work: https://www.redgategallery.com/content/li-xiaofeng

or: https://www.artsy.net/artist/li-xiaofeng

Categories
LAVORATO 人物 当代 艺术家

Contemporary | Cute illustrator who loves traveling-Xu Yu


Xu Yu, whose real name is Xu Yu. She said that she started this name because it was a homophonic and poetic picture of her original name, so she uses it now.

More materials to represent the picture to Xu Yu

According to her own introduction, there are many mediums for her paintings, watercolors, colored lead, oil pastels, carbon bars, board paintings, etc. Generally, a material will be changed after a long time, because she always tries to use more More materials to represent the picture.


“Hometown”

At first, I saw Xu Yu write this paragraph on Weibo’s Weibo: “My childhood was in Hangzhou, a small town in a small town in Jiaxing. The farthest place I visited was Hangzhou, when I looked at the province Travelers are envious of the glare of their eyes. When I was in high school, I saw someone going abroad to study abroad. I thought how good it would be if I were to go abroad. I have been looking up at the authors of the books and books since I bought Huaxin, thinking about if one day It ’s good to know them, and I ’d like to be able to freelance one day.

Things come to mind here, the world becomes wonderful. Later, when I went to college, I started to skip classes and save money to travel, and later I fought with my parents After studying abroad, I started to run around the world, and I also became an author of the heart and a freelancer. What ’s even more amazing is that those who I have followed since high school are much better now. Become a friend and a fan friend (speaking of a flower in my heart here).

as long as I do it, I can do it

Once I only dare to think about things, I naturally reflected them into reality a little bit. Not long ago, I had a wish to go to the beach to see the stars Look at the moon. At this moment on the sea breeze terrace, the stars are all over the sky. It seems that as long as I can think of anything, as long as I do it, I can do it. “


“The watermelon field in summer is a beautiful memory of my childhood”

For Xu Yu, painting is not about how skilled you are, but about showing what you want to say. Techniques are physical things, and what you really have in mind does not depend on your skills. Anyone can draw.


“One year I lived in Tuscany, and the small country-style lifestyle allowed me to enjoy the complete life of an Italian.”

Like Xu Yu, she is a cute little girl in the eyes of friends. Her favorite things may be painting and traveling, and occasionally love cooking.


“XuYu is really a childlike girl.”


In the memory of her friend, she was a girl who ran to Sicily with her two schoolbags on her own. The schoolbag was full of equipment needed for painting. “You will be very happy to follow her, she will tell you the story she met on the trip.” My friend said “Because Xu Yu particularly likes to chat with others, I remember that when the Roman tourist encountered her, she came to know a Japanese and Korean Traveling friends have also listened to their stories. It feels amazing! Xu Yu is really interesting and interesting (Courage of the Northeast dialect). ”


“The Beautiful Legend of Sicily”

Xu Yu said: “Every aspect of life can give me a lot of inspiration. Traveling, painting, watching movies, and living in different places. I want to paint too many things every day. I just hate that time is not enough.”

“The Legend of Sicily 2”

She also said: “The perception of live painting is completely different from that of taking pictures.”


“Southern Diary”

“Southern Diary” is her graduation project and the first personal picture book in her life. This book can be regarded as an account of her in the past 20 years.


The inner page of the picture book “Distance”

Xu Yu : Let’s go travel!

In fact, Xu Yu’s painting is the story of her life experience, simple and beautiful. We always have all kinds of messy reasons to disturb our travels, but with Xu Yu’s paintings, we can see the beauty and follow her story line.

At the same time, you can also look forward to the story “Italian Alone” she has assembled for three years.


Will you finally have the urge to say?


“Let’s go travel!”


“Southern Diary”

“Southern Diary”

“Southern Diary”


xu yu resume


Xu Yu, graduated from the School of Art and Design, Zhejiang University of Technology,


Now studying at the Bologna Academy of Fine Arts as a graduate student in comics, and is also a freelance creator,

Now cooperating with magazines such as “Painted Heart”, “Picture Box”, “Middle School Place”, “Children’s Literature”, “National Geographic”, “Traveller” and so on Co-published books “Adventures of Rabichi” and “Distance”. Published works:


In 2017, cooperated with Tomorrow Publishing House to publish “Distance”


In 2017, he co-published “The Adventures of Rabbi” with Red Horse Book


Published a personal picture book “Southern Diary” in 2018 (intimate traveler)


In 2018, cooperated with Le Fun to publish the flip book “Unveiling the 24 Solar Terms”