Chen Ke - Li Jikai - Wei Jia. Their work illustrates a transitional stage born out of the recent economic transformation. The use of cartoons reveals a mindset still steeped in the equalitarian conditions of the past yet thrust into a barren, isolated world, devoid of stability.
Chen Ke - Li Jikai - Wei Jia
curated by Tamar Arnon & Eli Zagury
Thomas Erben is pleased to present the United States debut of Chinese
painters Chen Ke, Li Jikai and Wei Jia. Through numerous solo and
group exhibitions, these three artists, born in the mid to late 70's,
have already established strong reputations in China and are
garnering international recognition as the new face of contemporary
Chinese painting. Their work illustrates a transitional stage within
the process of individualization born out of the recent
socio-economic transformation. The use of cartoons or oversimplified
human forms, which are a visual constant, reveals a mindset still
steeped in the equalitarian conditions of the past yet thrust into a
barren, isolated world, devoid of stability and stripped of humanity.
Chen Ke combines classical techniques and imagery with a contemporary
understanding of materiality and the human form. Self-absorbed
prepubescent girls stare blindly out from the canvas while surrounded
by chunky washes of acrylic paint, richly imagined textiles and
occasionally mingle with fantastical creatures. She will also
contribute to the exhibition a sculptural installation, including,
among other elements, a European-style toilet adorned with dream-like
vignettes that belie their vacuous subject matter through their
abject materiality.
In each of Li Jikai's large-scale, chromatically reductive works, a
diminutive human appears in heavily impastoed fields which bleed
around the forlorn figure, giving the existential impression of a
landscape on the verge of, or directly following eschatological
catastrophe. The tenuous relationship between humanity and
environment is focal in Li's canvases, which often locate the
narrative in impossibly life-threatening situations.
Though Wei Jia's work also concerns itself with exterior, physical
threats, in the tangible form of guns and knives, his focus falls
upon the shadowy realms his endangered, solitary characters inhabit.
While these surroundings possess both architectural and natural
elements, an overriding contextual emptiness leaves viewers with the
sense of having visited a limbo - not a space, but a space between -
where violence exists with unchecked, un-judged supremacy. Jia's
expansive, watery works in shades of gray, pink, violet and black are
awash in gothic, vaguely mystical scenarios that resist resolution.
Reacting to the kaleidoscope of compulsive economic growth, endemic
environmental pollution and an uprooting of social structures all
culminating in a frightening potential for social unrest, these
artists have symbiotically set out on a quest in search of self.
While Chen's work, which delves most fully into the realm of the
unreal, supposes optimistically that separation can offer infinite
creative outlets, Li remains precariously and undesirably isolated,
while Wei speaks to a more encompassing view that tempers an
intimidating reality with transcendent potential.
Reception: Thursday, November 1, 6 - 8:30 pm
Thomas Erben Gallery
516 West 20th Street - New York
Gallery hours: Tuesday - Saturday, 10-6
Free admission