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Sam Samore (1963); Zhang Peili (1957); Fact Study Institute: Cai Kai (1981), Yan Xing (1986); Jonathan Horowitz (1966); Jonathan Monk (1969); Gonkar Gyatso (1961); Trevor Paglen (1974); Qiu Xiaofei (1977)
zeng hong
Line Up
Tilted Horizon
I've Got Something
Chen Yujun and Chen Yufan
Extended Landscape
Propaganda Pavilion
The Stock Exchange, Weather and Sex
Breaking Away-an Abstract Art exhibition
ART HK 11
Paralysis Agitans Project
ART BEIJING
CIGE 2011
Chen Yujun, Gong Jian, Qiu Xiaofei, Song Kun, Yang Xinguang, Zhang Peili
Place of Games
Chen Shaoxiong, Geng Jianyi, Li Yongbin, Wang Jinsong& Xiaohong, Wang Gongxin, Wang Jianwei, Wang Peng, Xu Tan, Yang Fudong, Yang Zhenzhong, Zhang Peili, Zhou Tiehai, Zhu Jia
Chen Yujun, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Xiaofei, Song Kun, Yang Xinguang
The Empty Room
Zoo
Point of No Return
Liu Chuang
Art 41 Basel
Trail
Hu Xiaoyuan, Ji Lei, Liu Chuang, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Xiaofei, Yang Xinguang, Zhan Rui
Liu Chuang,Qiu Anxiong,Liang Yuanwei,Song Kun
Wormhole
Yes, That¡¯s All !
Qiu Anxiong
Art Premiere (booth H6)
Seeing is Believing
Chen Shaoxiong, Gong Jian, Liang Yuanwei, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Xiaofei, Song Kun, and Yang Xinguang
People¡¯s Park
Consumed
Dharmaguptaka-vinaya: The Discipline in Four Parts
Xi Jia ¨C River Lethe
Liu Xiaodong, Xu Tan, Qiu Xiaofei, Liu Wei, Gong Jian, Yang Xinguang, and Zhang Liaoyuan
Chen Shaoxiong,Hou Yong,Liang Yuanwei,Liu Wei,Qiu Anxiong,Qiu Xiaofei
Xijing Olympics: An Exhibition by the Xijing Men Collective(Chen Shaoxiong, Gimhongsok, Tsuyoshi Ozawa)
BLDG 115, RM 1904
A Gust of Wind
Drowning
House of Recollected Fragments
Chen Shaoxiong, Gong Jian, Kan Xuan, Liang Yuanwei, Liu Wei, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Xiaofei, Song Kun
James Beckett,Pash Buzari,David Zink Yi
Staring Into Amnesia
Tiger
The Outcast
Forged Realities
Love It, Bite It
Visible and invisible, Known and Unknown
It is my life
Bik Ver Pol ; Chen Shaoxiong ; Chen Xiaoyun ; Fu Jie ; Jia Zhangke ; Kan Xuan ; Liang wei ; Liang yue ; Liu ding ; Qiu Anxiong ; Qiu Xiaofei ; Song Kun ; Sun Xun ; Yangjiang group ; Zheng Guogu
Chen Shaoxiong Ozawa Tsuyoshi and their families
ZHENG Guogu (GuangdongYangjiang), Erik van LIESHOUT (NL), Charlotte SCHLEIFFERT (Xiamen, Rotterdam), Xu Tan (Guangzhou), XU Zhen (Shanghai)
JIANG Zhi (Beijing-Shenzhen), Aernout MIK (Netherlands), ZHOU Zixi (Shanghai)
FAN Di'an, LENG Lin, Karen SMITH, ZHANG Wei, PI Li,AI Weiwei,JIA Zhangke,WANG Jianwei

 

 
 

Consumed
A Yang Xinguang Solo Exhibition





Dates: 8 November ¨C 21 December
Time: Tuesday ¨C Sunday 11:00 ¨C 18:00
Opening: 8 November, 16:00-18:00
Place: Boers-Li Gallery, Caochangdi No. A-8

Boers-Li Gallery is pleased to announce that we will be hosting a Yang Xinguang solo show in our Gallery II space from 8 November to 21 December 2008. The show, entitled Consumed, is the artist¡¯s first solo exhibition in Beijing and will expand the artist¡¯s enquiries into form and materiality in a showcase of new sculptural works in wood and earth.

Yang Xinguang, a Beijing-based artist born in Hunan province in 1980, is a graduate of the sculpture academy of the Central Academy of Fine Arts. Through his participation in a series of group exhibitions across China, he has earned a reputation as one of the strongest exemplars of a reemerging sculptural sense among the younger generations of artists in China. His work truly represents a break with dominant modes of production in today, much more suited to the current climate of recession and consolidation than to the false sheen of the recent bubble.

Occupying a unique role in the dialectic of contemporary art history, Yang Xinguang steps back from both descriptive work on everyday life and protest work in the realm of politics. Instead, his introspective works recall the discourses of both American minimalist sculpture in terms of their phenomenological relationship with the body of the spectator and arte povera in terms of their openness towards material and space.

Yang Xinguang¡¯s works often involve wood, earth, and stone as their primary materials. Despite the process-oriented nature of their production, the emphasis remains on a final, finished product (although one differentiated from a unitary commodity); that is to say, all marks of production remain with the piece itself.

This exhibition will include primarily new works in the artist¡¯s signature styles: stone formations, organic earthen shapes, wooden hooks, bored stones, shaved timbers, logs, and two-dimensional woodcarvings. We find, for example, a set of wooden hooks hung from the ceiling. Shiny and perfectly shaped, these forms evolved naturally along the innate structural lines of the chosen pieces of wood. Only after he had finished his whittling did Yang Xinguang realize that these hooks¡ªintended to represent those used to hang meat¡ªtook on the texture of bones, implying a bizarre connection between life and death that evolved during the artist¡¯s process of experimentation.

The primary themes interrogated in these pieces involve the language of form and the nature of materiality. Form, here, is a language. Like human language in its Saussurian conception, form in these works is never a simple tool. Although it can be used to mold the material object in a certain sense, it can also shape the scriptor through a process of mutual overdetermination. This form reflects the role of desire in the processing of any material, with the conscious act of the artist as the necessary supplement that reveals and destroys the cultural value attached to the object itself.

The artist emphasizes, however, that his process is largely one of researching material through form, or an exploration into the natural properties of the material. In this sense, these works are as much a pursuit of an ¡°original¡± state of nature as they are an interrogation of the possibility of a transformation of this origin by the institutions of art. Just as Yang Xinguang exposes the cultural connotations and constructions of materiality by allowing his hand to be guided by certain ¡°innate¡± properties of the material itself, the viewer is always aware that meaning is attached to material as the hand of the artist alters its shape.

It is curious, then, that the artist refuses to offer conceptual readings of his work before its final shape appears; indeed, Yang Xinguang is often himself unaware which in direction his material will take him. Calling into question the subjectivity and responsibility of the artist, this de-emphasized style of subjective production balances on the line between the social and the ¡°primitive¡± (a marked space of solitude beyond the boundaries of self-conscious cultural reference).

In this way, it could be said that these sculptures have a tendency to leave space beside. Despite the fact that their construction relies heavily on the interplay of positive and negative space and often consist largely of empty air, an observer may note that this emptiness is in fact consumed by form¡ªthe language of materiality.


For more information on the coming exhibition, please contact us.

Tel: +86-10-6432-2620

Email: info@boersligallery.com

Web: www.boersligallery.com