Cang Xin
BAI Yiluo
CANG Xin
CUI Xiuwen
CHEN Lingyang
CHEN Qiulin
HE Yunchang
HONG Hao
HONG Lei
HUANG Yan
LI Wei
LIANG Yuanwei
LIN Tianmiao
LIU Jin
MA Liuming
MIAO Xiaochun
RONG Rong
SHAOYINONG & MUCHEN
SHENG Qi
SHI Guorui
WANG Jin
WANG Qingsong
WENG Peijun
WU Gao Zhong
XU Heng
XU Zhen
YANG Fudong
YANG Yong
YANG Zhenzhong
ZENG Yicheng
ZHANG Dali
ZHANG Huan
ZHAO Bandi
ZHU Ming
Susana Iturrioz
Zhu Qi
Chinese Contemporary Photography
Zhu yi! Chinese Contemporary Photography
Curator Susana Iturrioz
During this transition, … by imitating the image, it (photography) was able visually to explain in-depth
this systematic reform of the country. It is above all important to note that contemporary
photography has been able to produce the ‘self-portrait’, the individual during ongoing reforms, and
his personal conscientious objection to this inevitable evolution.
Zhu Qui (from the catalogue of the exhibition)
Contemporary Photography” (North Gallery, from March 15 to September 23), an extensive exhibition
of the works of the new generations of Chinese artists who bear witness to the rapid social and
economic transformation of this so-called “Asian giant”. The exhibition brings together 120 works of
30 photographers, all of them born after 1960, concerned about questions such as the recovery of
their cultural memory, their individual and collective identity in a changing society, the degradation
of nature and urban landscapes under the pressure of economic development, as well as other
effects caused by this phenomenon, the interest in fashion and the unstoppable consumerism. Since
the arts began to develop following the opening-up of the Chinese regime, photography has become
one of the preferred working media of the new Chinese artists. And since ten Chinese artists made
their "debut" at the 1993 Venice biennial, the West has become aware of a rapid penetration in the art
system with a growing demand in the market and in exhibition spaces. “Zhù Yi! Chinese
Contemporary Photography” is a joint production of ARTIUM and the Palau de la Virreina
(Barcelona), with the curator Susana Iturrioz.
“Zhù Yi! Chinese Contemporary Photography" is possibly the largest exhibition of contemporary Chinese art
ever held in Spain. The most literal translation of the expression “zhù yi!”, taken from Mandarin Chinese, is
“Watch out!”. Following two of the possible interpretations of this expression, the exhibition attempts both to
draw our attention to the growing interest of new Chinese artists in the western art system and to reveal the
issues in which they were focusing their attention at this time of a difficult transition between strict
communism to a more open society, especially in the realm of economics and, in a different way, in social
aspects.
The controlled opening-up of the Communist regime after the death of Mao in 1976 provided an opportunity
for Chinese artists to evolve from the dictates of socialist realism to new forms of expression. The new
Chinese art underwent several transformations, with different levels of liberty, in the late seventies ("Star
Group"), in the mid eighties ("New wave") and in the early nineties (with the precedent of the extremely brief
exhibition in 1989 “China/Avant-Garde”, closed by the police) until the events of Tiananmen Square, which
represented a step backwards. It was from that moment when a new generation of artists discovered the
possibilities offered by photography as a means of expression, narration and experimentation.
The exhibition produced by ARTIUM and the Palau de la Virreina presents the work of 33 of these artists,
who were born after 1960 and who live and work in China. Many of these artists have adopted photography
as a parallel medium or following their work as “performers”, as is the case of Zhang Huan and Wang Jin,
while others, the majority, are trained painters, such as Wang Quingsong and Miao Xiaochun.
Major transformation
“Zhù Yi!” contains one hundred and fifty photographs of these artists taken since 1994 to the present day.
During this time, China, the most highly populated and one of the most extensive countries in the world, a
military and economic power, has undergone a major transformation in its social and production structures. It
is these changes, precisely, that are reflected in the works of these artists, tackling common subjects through
the use of very personal aesthetic formulas: age-old history, identity, the individual in the new urban context,
the degradation of nature in the interests of development and the novelty of the consumer society in a country
which until only a few years ago was closed in on itself.
In this way, the memory of a distant past is present in the works of Miao Xiaochun, who uses the Chinese
scholar with his traditional costumes and headdresses and the Great Wall of China as symbols, or those of
Hong Lei, who alludes to the tyranny of the emperor over his concubines in the Forbidden City. Allusions to
the more recent history of the country appear in the photographs of the duo Shao Yinong & Muchen, who
return to the places where assemblies were held during the cultural Revolution, today converted into
inhospitable or simply abandoned warehouses and stables.
In search of identity, these photographers (Hong Lei, Lin Tianmiao) take self-portraits characterised as alien
figures and with diffused, ambiguous faces. The exhibition acquires a more critical tone when art portrays
individuals in a context they do not accept: the isolation and contempt of intellectuals compared to the search
for success and quick money (Yang Fudong, Wan Quingsong) and the brutal urban development (Zhang
Dali, Yang Zhengzhong)
The effects on the country's natural environment and social structure are some of the first consequences of
the rapid economic growth of China. Many of these photographers turn their gaze towards nature, alerting
their fellow citizens to the fact that there is something beyond the iron, concrete and glass structures (Can
Xing) or by painting (and photographing afterwards) traditional Chinese motifs, representing the four seasons,
on the faces of several people. Lastly, the exhibition testifies to the way the country has been possessed by
consumer fever, converting products which until a few years ago were completely unknown, such as cars,
cosmetics and designer clothes, among others, into icons of a new way of life which, nevertheless,
apparently does not guarantee happiness: the rapid change from the traditional Chinese lifestyle to western
modes may produce a vacuum.
The artists selected for this exhibition often coincide in their subject matter and in the ideas they have developed, although each one of these are dealt with in accordance with their individual aesthetic sensibilities and preferences.
Taking part:
BAI Yiluo
CANG Xin
CUI Xiuwen
CHEN Lingyang
CHEN Qiulin
HE Yunchang
HONG Hao
HONG Lei
HUANG Yan
LI Wei
LIANG Yuanwei
LIN Tianmiao
LIU Jin
MA Liuming
MIAO Xiaochun
RONG Rong
SHAOYINONG & MUCHEN
SHENG Qi
SHI Guorui
WANG Jin
WANG Qingsong
WENG Peijun
WU Gao Zhong
XU Heng
XU Zhen
YANG Fudong
YANG Yong
YANG Zhenzhong
ZENG Yicheng
ZHANG Dali
ZHANG Huan
ZHAO Bandi
ZHU Ming
All of them are committed to Chinese society and expressed a range of different concerns in each one of their photographs. With a wide range of styles, they reflect what is really happening in a country about which we have such distorted and incomplete information.
Catalogue of the exhibition, with texts by Susana Iturrioz and Zhu Qi
Activities around the exhibition: group performance by Cang Xin (march 16, 19.00); lecture by Julia Colman
(march 15, 20.00); cinema series “Target: China Today” (from april 14)
Production: ARTIUM, Basque Museum-Centre of Contemporary Art (Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain) and Palau de la
Virreina (Barcelona, Spain)
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Afonso Gortázar. In albis
Lower East Gallery, until june 10 2007
ARTIUM, Basque Centre-Museum of Contemporary Art presents the exhibition “Afonso Gortázar. In
albis”, the first major exhibition in a museum of one of the main figures in Basque painting and at the
same time one of the most indisputable representatives of figurative painting. The title of the
exhibition refers to the continuous presence of blank canvases in the oeuvre of Alfonso Gortázar
(Bilbao, 1955), especially from the mid nineties. On many occasions the painter has been portrayed
(or self-portrayed) in front in a reflexive pose, apparently “in albis”. The exhibition contains about
thirty works, most belonging to the last decade, with several works done especially for the ARTIUM
exhibition. A blank canvas and a selection of collages complete the exhibition. “Alfonso Gortázar. In
albis” is a production of ARTIUM.
Press Officer
Antón Bilbao
Tf.: 945-20 90 23 | Fax: 945-20 90 49 abilbao@artium.org
ARTIUM
Basque Museum-Centre of Contemporary Art
Francia 24, 01002, Vitoria-Gasteiz, Spain