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Wang Guangyi

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Wang Guangyi
Wang Guangyi in 2018
Born
王广义

1957
NationalityChinese
MovementPolitical Pop
Websitewangguangyi.artron.net (in Chinese)

Wang Guangyi (Chinese: 王广义; born 1957) is a Chinese artist. He is known as a leader of the new art movement that started in China after 1989, and for his Great Criticism series of paintings, which use images of propaganda from the Cultural Revolution (1966–1976) and contemporary brand names from western advertising.[citation needed]

Life

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Wang Guangyi was born in Harbin, Heilongjiang Province in 1957.[1] Wang's father was a railway worker in northeastern China. Like many other people, Wang experienced the influence of the Cultural Revolution and had to work in a rural village for three years. He too became a railway worker.[2] Wang tried for four years to get into a college. After several failed attempts, he enrolled at Zhejiang Academy of Fine Arts. He graduated from the oil painting department of the academy in 1984.[3] He lives and works in Beijing, China.[1]

Artwork

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Langham Place Atrium overpass between the Langham Place Hotel and the Langham Place Mall. The statue is part of the Materialist Series by Wang Guangyi

His work is considered in China to be in the Political Pop genre;[1][4][5][6] some consider this an error.[7]

Early works – Mid-1980s

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The North Pole is a recurring theme in Wang Guangyi's early works; it is seen not in relation to its geographic characteristics, but as a symbolic place where a new faith is born, in which the individual must deal principally with himself, but without freeing himself from the social. Working on the Frozen North Pole cycle (1984-1985), the group of young Artists of the North, of which Wang Guangyi was a part, chose to confront themselves with Western philosophy. In his Post Classical series (1986-1988) Wang Guangyi worked on a synthetic revision of the great works of Western art tied to themes of religion, morality, faith and ideology. These paintings use various grey tones and encapsulate the human figure and its environment without many details. Wang Guangyi's objective consisted in elaborating a style that deviated from that of classic art, an expressive strategy which derived from his reading of Gombrich.[2][8]

Great Criticism, 1990-2007

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Great Criticism is Wang Guangyi's most famous cycle of works. These works use propaganda images of the Cultural Revolution and contemporary logos from Western advertisements. Wang Guangyi began this cycle in 1990 and ended it in 2007 when he became convinced that its international success would compromise the original meaning of the works, namely that political and commercial propaganda are two forms of brainwashing.[2][8][9]

1990s

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The series and installations VISA (1995-1998), Passport (1994-1995), and Virus Carriers (1996-1998) contain images of infants, grown adults and dogs accompanied by their respective names, places, dates of birth and genders. The aforementioned titles of these works are then imprinted upon these images. By forefronting the bureaucratic procedures tied to moving from one country to another, these works reveal that the organization of the State enacts its own defenses when evaluating the potential danger of individuals. Wang Guangyi perceives a well-established climate of reciprocal suspicion and looming danger, which ripened during the Cold War and still persists today, even if it has lost the oppressiveness born of forced indoctrination. Wang Guangyi's reflection deals with the relationship that Power has with the individual, on which it maintains control by increasing collective fears to then propose itself as a bastion against unknown dangers that could suddenly strike against defenseless people. The artist maintains that through these forms of psychological pressure, a tacit agreement that provides protection against the contagion of new viruses in exchange for the renouncement of a part of one's freedom is forged between the Power and the individual.[2][9]

2000s

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During the 2000s the relationship between Wang Guangyi's works and the transcendent increased. In fact the title given to the Materialist series (2001-2005) is not contradictory. This series of sculptures made from the images of twelve workers, farmers and soldiers that were taken from propaganda images. According to Wang Guangyi these propaganda images bring to light that the main force of the people, the anger expressed by their movements, derives from faith in ideology. With these sculptures the artist attempts to put an image to the general feeling of the people while referencing dialectic materialism - Materialist is a term that has particular import in Chinese history in that it summarizes the socialist ideology. At the same time, the artist also sees another level of meaning within the work. In art, things that possess certain conceptual qualities are called “the object”, which in Chinese has the same root as the word “materialist”, Wang Guangyi has also represented the great political (Lenin, Stalin, Mao), spiritual (Christ) and spiritual and political leaders (John XXIII), as well as the philosophers whose thought continues to exert its influence today (Marx and Engels) in series of oil paintings entitled New Religion (2011). The images seem taken from photographic negatives, and though the artist uses a traditional oil painting technique in these works, the ambiguity created by the reference to photography breaks the familiarity that the spectator has with them, thereby opening up interpretations as to their meaning. Through this cycle of works Wang Guangyi has asked himself about the commonalities between the great utopias, the fascination that they exert on humans, and why all men feel the need to find figures on which to place their faith. The installations that make up the cycle Cold War Aesthetics (2007-2008) contain historical reconstructions of the Cold War period. In these works, Wang Guangyi deals with the psychological effects of the propaganda that was characteristic of the Chinese political climate of that time. In order to evoke a psychological reaction, the artist makes the spectators feel the emotion, climate and mentality of that era.[2][9]

Criticism

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Wang Guangyi, like others such as Fang Lijun, has become a millionaire, one of China's nouveau riches. Such painters, with their large studios and expensive houses and cars, are in China called bopu dashi or "pop masters".[6] Wang Guangyi's successful career and fast growing wealth have drawn criticism. Some have questioned his artistic value, along with the price of his works. Some critics claim that Wang "has lost his artistic ingenuity, gives in to the market, and has also become dependent on repeating his already successful works".[10]

Solo exhibitions

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Wang Guangyi has had a number of solo exhibitions, including:[1]

  • 1993: Galerie Bellefroid, Paris, France
  • 1994: Hanart TZ Gallery, Hong Kong
  • 1997: Galerie Klaus Littmann, Basel, Switzerland
  • 2001: Faces of Faith, Soobin Art Gallery, Singapore
  • 2003: Gallery Enrico Navarra, Paris, France
  • 2004: Galerie Urs Meile, Lucerne, Switzerland
  • 2006: Arario Gallery, Seoul, Korea
  • 2007: Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris, France
  • 2008: Visual Politics, He Xiangning Art Museum, Shenzhen, China
  • 2008: Cold War Aesthetics, Louise Blouin Institute, London
  • 2011: The Interactive Mirror Image, Tank Loft, Chongqing Contemporary Art Center, Chongqing, China
  • 2012: Thing-In-Itself: Utopia, Pop and Personal Theology, Today Art Museum, Beijing, China[11]
  • 2012: Cold War Aesthetics, Pujiang Oversea Chinese Town, Shanghai, China[12]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d Wang Guangyi. Saatchi Gallery. Archived 20 August 2013.
  2. ^ a b c d e Demetrio Paparoni, Wang Guangyi, Words and Thoughts 1985−2012, Skira, Milan, Italy, 2013
  3. ^ Wang Guangyi Archived 9 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine. ShangArt Gallery. Accessed January 2014.
  4. ^ Skira: Fall 2013 Archived 12 January 2014 at the Wayback Machine. Milan: Skira Editore. p. 26–27. Accessed January 2014.
  5. ^ Ralph Croizier (1999). The Avant-Garde and the Democracy Movement: Reflections on Late Communism in the USSR and China. Europe-Asia Studies 51 (3): 483-513. p. 495. (subscription required)
  6. ^ a b Sheldon Hsiao-peng Lu (1997). Art, Culture, and Cultural Criticism in Post-New China.New Literary History 28 (1: Cultural Studies: China and the West): 111-133. p.. 116. (subscription required)
  7. ^ Wang Guangyi: Works and Thoughts 1985−2012 Archived 26 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine. Skira Group. Accessed January 2014.
  8. ^ a b Lu Peng, A History Of Art in 20th-Century China, Edizioni Charta, Milan, Italy, 2010, pp. 1153–1174
  9. ^ a b c Huang Zhuan, Politics and Theology in Chinese Contemporary Art /Reflections on the work of Wang Guangyi, Skira, Milan, Italy 2013
  10. ^ 另一个王广义,未必就是真的王广义 (in Chinese). 南方周末. Retrieved 6 May 2012.
  11. ^ Thing-in-itself: Utopia, Pop and Personal Theology – Wang Guangyi Retrospective Exhibition. Today Art Museum. Accessed January 2014.
  12. ^ Sue Wang (2 November 2012). 2012 Public Art Project "Wang Guanyi: Cold War Aesthetic" to be exhibited at Pujiang Overseas Chinese Town Archived 7 November 2019 at the Wayback Machine. Cafa Art Info. Accessed January 2014.

Further reading

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  • Karen Smith. Guangyi, 2003
  • David Spalding. The Paintings of Wang Guangyi: Revolutionary Acts? January, 2006
  • Mary Bittner Wiseman (2007). Subversive Strategies in Chinese Avant-Garde Art. The Journal of Aesthetics and Art Criticism 65 (1, Special Issue: Global Theories of the Arts and Aesthetics; Winter, 2007): p. 109–119 (subscription required)
  • Demetrio Paparoni. Wang Guanyi: Works and Thoughts 1985-2012. Milan: Skira, 2013

Media related to Wang Guangyi at Wikimedia Commons