NEW
BEIJING
Young Painting from China
Chen Hongzhu
| Liu Guangguang
23 September - 21 October 2010
"An unmissable exhibition from some of China's
rising stars"
Amelia's Magazine
Download Catalogue of Works
Download Press Release
What is it like
to grow up in China today - to come of age at the
same time as your
country steps forward as a major world superpower? Being
a young adult in China now means being exposed to choices
and lifestyles that your parents never dreamt of. It
means being influenced by Western culture - and by Western
values. It also means that you, and all your friends,
are the product of the one child policy: a generation
of only children, facing a world of change and uncertainty.
New Beijing takes a snapshot of this New World Order
through two young artists at the cutting edge of this
post-80s generation: Chen Hongzhu and Liu Guanguang.
These painters explore issues that are changing the shape
of the Chinese contemporary art market, and as such the
show gives a unique insight into the shifting of the
sands in this most exciting of art scenes.
Chen Hongzhu is one of the
New Generation of Chinese women. Confident and rebellious,
she graduated from the
prestigious Central Academy of Fine Arts, and her work
has already been picked up by the Chinese contemporary
uber-collector Uli Sigg. Influenced by American painters
such as Mark Ryden and John Currin, her zoomorphic self-portraits
meld surrealism with self-examination. They depict seemingly
perfect porcelain dolls that are nevertheless damaged & fragile,
the cuts and dripping blood on the otherwise pristine
bunnies hinting at traumas faced and survived. Her paintings
suggest a tragedy in beauty, a disappointed innocence,
but also a steely determination – disillusionment,
yes, but also a persistence to carry on.
Liu Guangguang’s paintings
depict young Chinese who dress up in animal suits and
costumes, playing with
identities but still disjointed and unsettled. Dazed
and confused, his subjects stare out at the viewer as
if gazing into the void. At every turn they find themselves
in cold, stark environments that offer little in the
way of comfort or homeliness. It is as if choice in identities
has only served to create an atmosphere of uncertainty
and insecurity for his lone, lost adolescents. Liu draws
a distinct parallel between the experience of coming-of-age
as a young adult, and the current condition of Chinese
youth society, coming to terms with its new, more open
position in the global order and attempting to find some
means of orientation. Liu Guangguang is a graduate of
Lu Xun Academy of Fine Arts.
Both artists address the
themes of how Chinese youth grapple with an open consumer
society – with choice,
options, expendable cash and pop culture… all the
trappings that were unknown to their parents’ generation.
In their stark portraits of fractured innocence, it is
as if the optimism of pop is corrupted by the pressure
to make life choices without any guidance or values.
Unlike their predecessors, these Chinese paintings are
less about politics, and more about individualism – an
exploration of how Western values take root in a communist
context. The previous generation of Chinese artists defined
their vulnerability in opposition to the state; this
post-80s generation looks to the expanse of “choice” that
the New World Order has delivered, and the sea of uncertainty
that it has placed them in.
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One inch photo by
Liu Guangguang
Oil on canvas, 2009, 2010
50cm x 55cm

What is Memory
No. 2 by Chen Hongzhu
Oil on canvas, 2010
150cm x 110cm
Unstoppable Rain
Oil on canvas, 2010
140cm x 110cm
Someone's Perfect
Weather by Chen Hongzhu
Oil on canvas, 2010
50cm x 50cm
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