Posts Tagged ‘Selected’

Selected Works by Thomas Helbig at the Saatchi-gallery

January 2nd, 2010

Thomas Helbig’s Rom emerges as a palimpsest of muted expression. Obliterated in a blizzard of gauzy brushwork, Helbig’s forms appear as half-articulate sentiments: architectural shapes, reticent drips, and mumbled textures surface through the mists as revenants of their former selves. Proposing a literally whitewashed narrative, Rom conceives landscape as intangible space, creating an epic romanticism tinged with disorienting solitude.

Commanding with a painterly dynamism, Thomas Helbig’s abstractions strive to capture the essence of power. Within his raw canvases, Helbig alludes to the unwieldy forces of nature, and the representational modes used to harness its vastness. Stylistically, Helbig recycles art history, implicating visual language as reflective of ideology: from the political subtexts of abstraction, to the religious spiritualism of romanticism. In Seele, Helbig creates a field of high drama, his blacks and blues churning with the unpredictable depth of night. Reminiscent of Turner’s climactic impressionism, Helbig’s Seele suggests both haunting landscape and stormy psychology.

Reworking the theme of Picasso’s Girl Before A Mirror, Thomas Helbig’s Wilde Mit Spiegel sets up a questionable allure, positing the perception of beauty as a consequence of excess. Hidden within an abstract field of wild brushwork and gory splatters, Helbig paints a figure, profiled as grotesque caricature. His Holbien-ish shrew is defined by her painterly construction, the mimetic qualities of the media bubbling as boils and warts, crackling like matted hair; above her head a chandelier of gobby yellow suggests tarnished halo. To the left, an orange vignette doubles as figurative mirror and comic speech bubble brandishing a sketchy image of pleasantry.

Thomas Helbig’s Jung Frau offers a morbid fascination. Using the textural contrasts of materials, Helbig creates a biomorphic abstraction veering between charred and fossilised remain and science fiction species. Embedding smooth moulded forms in rough globular material, Jung Frau possesses a tactile physicality at odds with itself: fragile and brutal, elevated and primitive. Coated in high gloss black paint, Helbig’s sculpture is both sinister and humorous, suggesting apocalyptic narratives that are glamorous and abject.

Conclusion:

At first glance Thomas Helbig’s sculptures appear to be futuristic ruins; bizarre and broken finds hinting at some remote gothic civilisation, glorifying its defunct authority.

what to Do Next. . .

Read more information about Thomas Helbig paintaings and ehibitions at

http://www. saatchi-gallery. co. uk/artists/thomas_helbig. htm

Selected Art Works by Shi Jinsong

December 31st, 2009

Shi Jinsong was born on 1969 in Dangyang county, Hubei province, China. He lives and works in Wuhan and Beijing, China. Shi Jinsong has branded his stainless steel baby product line Na Zha, a child warrior deity of Chinese folklore celebrated for his bravery and strategy in the battlefield. Befitting its title, this sculptural series consists of a cradle, a carriage, a walker, a toy, needle-tipped pacifiers and pieces of abacus, all outfitted with deadly weapons inside out and evokes the image of Swiss army knives. The artist’s extreme makeover of formerly harmless and delightful objects into such a meticulously built and disturbingly handsome compilation of machineries was geared to expose the constant battles we have to fight to survive the manipulative, erotic and violent nature of our consumption culture and the fearful world. Chambers Fine Art is proud to announce the opening of Na Zha Baby Boutique. Comprised of sculptures, blueprints, and photographs, this exhibition represents the debut solo show by Shi Jinsong, one of the leading young sculptors in China.

The title refers to an enduring figure of Chinese folklore and mythology: Na Zha, an impish trickster with supernatural powers and flamboyant fashion sense (legend has it his red silk trousers generated so much heat the sea began to boil, enraging the East Sea Dragon King). Na Zha’s essential ferocity long since tamed in the Chinese psyche, he is now chiefly celebrated as a God of Lotteries and Gambling, a commodified totem of the new global economy. “Na Zha” is here recast as the brand name for an outrageously unsafe line of baby products. Meticulously assembled in stainless steel from intricate mechanical drawings, they include a deadly Carriage; a sadistic Cradle; a sinister Walker; and a malicious, multi-part Toy complete with needle-tipped pacifiers and dismembering abacus. Baby Boutique confronts its “shopper” with a radically strange and seductive “product,” lethal luxury designed to reveal the forces that dominate our lives in unimaginable ways.

Shi Jinsong enrolled at the Hubei Academy of Fine Arts in 1994, majoring in sculpture and mastering a gamut of traditional techniques. Under the influence of three powerful stimuli – radical socio-cultural change in China; a reading of Foucault’s Madness and Civilization; and the birth of his first daughter – the artist began to investigate ideas of transformation and control. Featured in Alors La Chine, a groundbreaking survey of contemporary Chinese art mounted at the Centre Pompidou in 2003,

Conclusions:

Shi Jinsong had already established his own style and the impact of the work had won him a strong reputation in Chinese art circles.

What to Do Next. . .

If you want any information about Shi Jinsong or looking for his paintings please visit us on http://www. saatchi-gallery. co. uk/artists/shi_jinsong. htm

Selected Art Works by Li Qing and His History

December 30th, 2009

Li Qing was born on 1981 in Huzhou, Zhejiang province, China. He is a graduate student at China Academy of Art and one of the representatives of this new generation. In Li Qing’s work juxtaposition usually occurs between two similar subject matters or scenes but in difference chronologically. The tension or relation between the two is usually the resource of concept of the work. In China’s art scene the juxtaposition of old and new, which reflects the remarkable social transition taking place over the last three decades, was/is popular.

Li Qing is making a simple and easily accessible visual world where audience may exchange idea and share a common feeling. Many of the prototypes of contemporary Chinese art were heavy in their subject matter in order to express artists’ negative attitude towards the current corruptive system. Li Qing successfully presents a magic pictorial series of contemporary Chinese art. Simultaneously, psychological complexity toward the remarkable social transitions of China is easily understood. His art is a visual game but entwined with social information that reflects the vicissitudes of the society. The subject matter is ordinary, and unnoticed, some are like news photo for a propaganda purpose. He presents a picture that combine with images and reality. Grand rhetoric and heavy theme are non-exist. Li Qing is more interested with an ordinary scene that affects our perception to the world. Li Qing is a great practitioner of oil painter. With his bold brush stroke, exact impasto, and, he smartly turns the visual games and subject matter into his own painterly game, a pictorial world that reflects changing reality.

This pair of almost identical paintings by Li Qing is based on an image taken from The Scandal of the Century, a documentary film on the notorious marriage between Prince Charles and Princess Diana. Neither of the two paintings is a strict reproduction of the original image. Instead, the artist has deliberately inserted six slight alterations into these two paintings, the most noticeable ones being the two star-shaped knots vs. two round-shaped knots on the red cloth in the foreground. Wedding is part of a larger series consisting of matching images in pairs, which the artist started in April 2005. The differences that the artist designed for every pair of paintings often rise from the irreproducible nature of experience and memory, the derivatives of conspiracy and disclosure, the delicate division between reality and forgery, and the relationship between painting and source image. As the viewer is coaxed into looking for the distinctions between the two paintings, the artist questions the principle of painting which dictates that every stroke can’t be repeated.

Conclusions:

Li Qing is among those group younger artists. Their emergence in the art scene will be symbolic to Chinese art world and the entire society at large. For the artist his visual game is perhaps a play of pigment and stroke, but his audience there is something significant behind the game.

What to Do Next. . .

If you want any information about Li Qing or looking for his paintings please visit us on http://www. saatchi-gallery. co. uk/artists/li_qing. htm

Selected Feng Zhengjie Artworks at Saatchi-gallery

December 28th, 2009

Feng Zhengjie was born in the countryside of Sichuan Province in 1968. In response to the explosive development of China’s entertainment industry, Feng creates works that serve as a commentary on the new glamour and fashion of today’s society. His works also reflect a personal ambivalent fascination with and an aversion to Chinese pop culture.

Education

1992-1995

• Oil Painting Dept of Sichuan Academy of Fine Arts, MFA

1988-1992

• Fine Arts Education Dept of Sichuan Academy of Fine Arts, BFA

Feng Zhengjie decided to take inspiration from the popular images he had grown up with in rural Sichuan. Critics are unanimous in placing Feng’s paintings in the realm of the critique of contemporary consumer societyMalicious and mischievous are the glances that seem to cross only in the series “Romantic Trip”; these fleeting looks reflect games played by young couples for whom the sole possible form of communication is loving attraction. Sparkles are covered by large sunglasses in the case of the “humanoids” which are the subject of the series “Coolness”: characters are portrayed with naked bodies and big heads, bald and posed in the attitude of a famous movie star, looking similar to extraterrestrials that study our behavior whilst at the same time mocking us.

In this phase of his work he is young, just graduated at the Fine Art Academy and, already, he is searching for his place in the world where he can express his ideas and show a determination that somewhere in the future will always be his distinctive outlook. Then, after the sectioning of their skin and muscles, the faces of his characters become as happy and plump as the ones to be found in typical Chinese New Year posters. These augural posters emerge in the 16th century as a popular artistic form; their gaudy colors depict historical, legendary, folkloristic and daily scenes. This form of art developed further in the following centuries, reaching its zenith under the Qing dynasty and subsequently becoming aligned to advertising and political propaganda posters. Maoist ideology becomes “pop” and, through Feng Zhengjie’s interpretation, the figures gain something of the kitsch and grotesque. Little seems enough to make these people smile; the illusion of a “romantic trip” is frozen by a photographic shot in a plastic and fake pose. Times change, historical phases go on and, with a critical look, Feng Zhengjie follows their evolution.

Find more About Feng Zhengjie paintings end Exhibitions at Saatchi-Gallery

http://www. saatchi-gallery. co. uk/artists/feng_zhengjie. htm

Selected Jeppe Hein Exhibitions and Paintings at Saatchi-gallery

December 27th, 2009

Jeppe Hein’s works address us individually; though, importantly, we might not have asked them to. Hein delights in apparently serendipitous events, suspending common sense laws of cause and effect and conjuring up scenarios in which, in direct response to our presence, seemingly sentient behaviour is coaxed from inanimate things.

selected GROUP EXHIBITIONS

2005

Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles

MCA, Chicago

2004

Wohnseifer / Hein, Union Projects, London

Moving Parts, Kunsthalle Graz / Museum Jean Tinguely Basel

Performative Installation, Siemens 2004, Galerie für zeitgenössische Kunst, Leipzig

A Secret History of Clay: From Gauguin to Gormley, Tate Liverpool

Gegen den Strich, Kunsthalle Baden-Baden

Quicksand, De Appel, Amsterdam

What did you expect?, Galerie Jan Mot, Brussels

2003

Hein, Schellberg, Wohnseifer, Schnittraum, Köln

The straight or crooked way, Royal Collage of Art, London

Biennial of Ceramic in Contemporary Art, Albisola

Auf eigene Gefahr, Schirn Kunsthalle, Frankfurt

Performative Installation, Galerie für Zeitgenössische Kunst, Leipzig

2002

Ingrepp, Uppsala Kunstmuseum, Uppsala

I promise it`s political, Museum Ludwig, Köln

Fuzzy, Galleria Minini, Brescia

Inside / Outside, Galerie für zeitgenössische Kunst, Leipzig

Hell, neugerriemschneider, Berlin

No Return. Positions from the Collection Haubrok, Museum Abteiberg, Mönchengladbach

2001

Changes possible, Kiel

Biennale di Venezia

Arbeit, Essen, Angst, Kokerei Zollverein, Essen

Frankfurter Positionen 2001, Frankfurt

Strategies against Architecture II, Pisa

Neue Welt, Frankfurter Kunstverein

Take off, Arhus Kunstmuseum

In some of his pieces he articulates a dialogue between the work itself, the person encountering it and the gallery space in which it is sited – though this is a conversation for which one is wholly unprepared. Works of this kind imply a wry relationship both to the Minimalist sculpture of the 1960s and to those forms of institutional critique that sought to question the authority of the museum or gallery space. Yet Hein’s practice does not really fit either tradition – the mode of address and playful tone is at odds with, for example, phenomenological interpretations of Minimalist sculpture, in which the viewer participated in the work but as a relatively abstract presence.

The other wall shows what I chose to create in the end. With this exhibition I’ve been thinking about the gallery’s situation, and how it presents and represents art. How artists can go into an exhibition space and use it to stage their art. My job has been to find out how I, with the room as frame, can make my work function best, while maintaining a relationship with the room itself.

what to Do Next. . .

Read more Articles about Jeppe Hein http://www. saatchi-gallery. co. uk/artists/jeppe_hein. htm