Solo show
Solo show
Galerie Volker Diehl presents new works of Zhang Huan, one of the representatives of
the Chinese performance scene. Among the works, My Boston, a recent performance at
the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts is presented as photographs
documenting the action.
Zhang Huan explains the inspiration for his performance:
When I was young, my mother often told me "You have to study hard so when you grow
up you have a bright future." But I never liked to read books. Whenever I read a
book my mind always wanders off and I fall fast asleep. I tried many different ways
to keep myself awake and concentrate. For example, I would bite my hands, stab my
flesh with a pen, and in Winter I would dunk my head into a pot of freezing cold
water I was really practicing the old Chinese idiom. I couldn't help it, I would
forget what I read immediately, so I read again and I still can't remember, not to
mention I couldn't understand it at all.
Later on, I had a great idea. Everyday I'd tear a page out of a book and eat it. The
result was I couldn't digest it at all, and I shit out the exact same thing as I
ate. I had many dreams involving books. In one of the dreams I discover all the
books that I have ever owned were being blown all over the sky by a mighty wind.
Suddenly, in a split second, all the books were floating on the river toward the
East. It was very unpredictable.
Before moving to New York in 1999, he lived in Beijing, where he and other artists
formed a group called "Beijing East Village". Beginning of the 90's, under the
influence of the post Tienanmen era, Zhang Huan and all other artists of avant garde
art in Beijing felt themselves forced to retreat into private spaces. His critical
view on social and private situations of life was interpreted by the government as a
subversive act.
Zhang Huan succeeds in merging western art history with traditional Chinese culture
into an independent hybrid in which he reflects and combines personal, social,
political and cultural situations. In many of his performances he undergoes extreme
burden to feel the the physical limitations of the human body. He mostly works with
his own body and occasionally involves other people and sometimes animals in his
performances. By theatrical exaggeration in his performance, Zhang Huan is able to
visualize the cultural contrasts.
Opening: Saturday, March 18, 7 p.m.
Galerie Volker Diehl
Zimmerstrasse 88-91- Berlin
Hours: Tue-sat 11 a.m. - 6 p.m.