憤怒的女性
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[楼主] xiaolinlin 2014-02-06 07:31:32



OUTSIDE THE LINES: New Art from China @ RH Contemporary Art in Chelsea NYC



Artists Pan Jian, Gao Weigang , Yan Bing, Gao Brother, Zheng Chongbin and Li Hui at opening of Outside the Lines@ RH Contempoary Art

http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123


RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12

Related:RH Contemporary Art,

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.


Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12

Related:RH Contemporary Art,

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.


Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12

Related:RH Contemporary Art,

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.


Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12

Related:RH Contemporary Art,

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.


Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12

Related:RH Contemporary Art,

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.


Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12

Related:RH Contemporary Art,

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.


Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12

Related:RH Contemporary Art,

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.


Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com

RH Contemporary Art presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA. On view at the RH Contemporary Art gallery, located at 437 West 16th Street in New York's Chelsea art district, from January 31 to April 12, 2014, the exhibition explores the cultural and philosophical concerns of 12 Chinese artists while revealing the dialogue among their diverse mediums, practices and iconography.

Artists Gao Weigang, the Gao Brothers, Hu Qinwu, Li Hui, Meng Zhigang, Ni Youyu, Pan Jian, Qiu Anxiong, Qiu Deshu, Yan Bing, Yang Yongliang and Zheng Chongbin, all from Beijing or Shanghai, will exhibit newly commissioned bodies of work as well as iconic artworks never before shown in New York. Their work incorporates light, sculpture, ink painting & animation, woodblock prints, photography, performance and installation. The artists in Outside the Lines build on the work of the previous generation of Chinese artists, who gained widespread international popularity through works labeled Political Pop or Cynical Realism. These 12 artists continue to push boundaries, diverging from tradition in their choices of medium, their inclusion of social commentary and their approaches, as they fuse inspiration from both the East and the West. Two artists - Yan Bing and Gao Weigang - will create works for the exhibition while participating in RH Contemporary Art's artist-in-residence program.

Several of the featured artists' work incorporates innovative approaches to traditional Chinese mediums. Zheng Chongbin, who is at the forefront of the contemporary ink painting movement, explores new directions in ink paintings that embody the influence of Western Minimalism and reflect his interest in light and space, properties that have historically inspired many West Coast artists. In turn, Hu Qinwu's subdued use of Chinese calligraphic circles in both his paintings and works on paper contrasts with the hectic pace of social change in contemporary China. Incorporating his iconic fissuring technique, Qiu Deshu's work presents a layered, evolving response to classical Chinese landscape painting. Qiu Anxiong uses traditional Chinese ink and digital techniques to create stop-motion animations that reflect the cultural and physical evolution of China; in doing so, he seeks to create connections between historic eras.

Other artists' inventive use of materials transcends traditional forms to reflect new media, performance and installations. Li Hui combines mirrors, laser beams and clouds of smoke to create mutable scenes that often require viewers' active participation. The resulting works explore dynamics of spirituality and technology, reflecting the man in the machine as well as Buddhist principles of transcendence. Mixed-media artist Ni Youyu pays homage to Chinese Literati Painters while adding contemporary abstractions to archetypical styles. His divergent works include miniature coins that are laboriously pounded and then painted as well as woodblock prints and acrylic-wash paintings. Gao Weigang's sculptural installations, both playful and cynical, challenge viewers' conditioned responses and prompt them to question their conditioning by society, history, education and family. The Gao Brotherscollaboratively create socially charged installation, performance, sculpture and photography works, iconoclastic pieces that cast both a critical and humanizing eye on contemporary China and its relationship to the West.

Many of the selected artists consider the evolution of traditional Chinese society within the context of rapid urbanization and social shifts brought about by economic change and westernization. Their work reflects the diverse and changing realities of contemporary China and its rapidly evolving economic and social environments. Yan Bing's paintings nostalgically allude to his memories of growing up in rural China and the fast pace of China's modern development. Meng Zhigang's paintings of architectural interiors convey a similar quality of absence as they comment upon the current housing crisis in China as well as an imagined apocalyptic, post-industrial future. Incorporating elements of traditional Chinese landscape painting with digital layering and dystopic scenarios, Yang Yongliang's photos and videos consider the new realities created through accelerated urban development. Pivoting between appearance and disappearance, Pan Jian's landscapes of everyday scenes in motion conjure a sense of ephemerality. They are both interpretations of actual places he has visited and collages of memories and fantasies.

Informed by the expertise of its global curatorial team, RH Contemporary Art's artist selection process included multiple in-depth studio visits to cultivate relationships with the artists and to achieve a deeper understanding of their individual cultural perspectives and mediums of expression.

Further exploring the artists' practices and inspirations, RH Contemporary Art has plans to produce six new original documentaries on the artists in the exhibition as a continuation of its artist documentary series available online at rhcontemporaryart.com. Volume 2 of the RH Contemporary Art Journal, featuring new critical essays and artist profiles, will be available in print and online in late February 2014.
Read more at http://www.broadwayworld.com/bwwart/article/RH-Contemporary-Art-Presents-OUTSIDE-THE-LINES-NEW-ART-FROM-CHINA-131-412-20140123#EUE9bTiLsbDPYJgx.99


Read more about RH Contemporary Art Presents OUTSIDE THE LINES: NEW ART FROM CHINA, 1/31-4/12 - BWWVisual ArtsWorld by www.broadwayworld.com






[沙发:1楼] guest 2014-02-06 23:28:09
打不开链接看什么?
[板凳:2楼] guest 2014-02-26 15:55:06
“中国新艺术”展RH当代艺术纽约画廊展出 A+A-2014-02-14 16:55:52

来源:艺术中国

导读:近日,RH当代艺术纽约画廊展出了一个题为“界线之外——中国新艺术”的当代艺术展。参展艺术家包括高岗,高氏兄弟,胡勤武,李辉,孟志刚,右玉,潘健,邱黯雄,仇德树,闫兵,杨永亮,郑崇斌等。

自亚洲艺术周日益在美国引起关注和追捧以来,围绕中国艺术的展览在美国变得越来越受欢迎。近日,RH当代艺术纽约画廊展出了一个题为“界线之外——中国新艺术”的当代艺术展。展览占据了RH当代艺术纽约画廊的几乎全部展示空间,囊括了12位中国艺术家创作的50件雕塑、绘画、水墨影像、版画、装置和综合媒介作品。

策展人Melanie Lam说:“对于大多数美国观众来说,他们眼里的中国当代艺术就是玩世现实主义和政治波普,这个展览就是希望改变人们的认识,看到中国当代艺术的创作现状和面貌。”

参展艺术家包括高岗,高氏兄弟,胡勤武,李辉,孟志刚,右玉,潘健,邱黯雄,仇德树,闫兵,杨永亮,郑崇斌等。
[地板:3楼] guest 2014-02-26 18:29:39

[4楼] guest 2014-02-26 18:31:49
2楼
好多艺术家的名字都写错了
[5楼] guest 2014-02-26 21:33:44
不明白为什么突然又有很多人对这些垃圾有兴趣
还去纽约展览
这些人在国内都混不下去了
去美国有啥用
看看他们的样子
让人恶心
[6楼] guest 2014-02-26 21:44:51
纽约有1万3干家画廊
[7楼] guest 2014-02-26 23:28:44
照片里的美女比展览好看
[8楼] guest 2014-02-26 23:34:31
这是个什么展览
大杂烩。
[9楼] guest 2014-02-26 23:35:12

[10楼] guest 2014-02-27 04:07:17
6楼说纽约有1万3干家画廊,肯定是个没去过纽约的傻逼土鳖!
纽约画廊是不少,像HR这样买断艺术家的作品做展览的数千平米的大画廊屈指可数。
[11楼] guest 2014-02-27 08:45:07
十楼是什么人啊
怎么张口就骂人啊
真搞不懂什么叫买断作品做展览
神马意思
[12楼] guest 2014-02-27 09:26:08


[13楼] guest 2014-02-27 15:47:14






[14楼] guest 2014-02-27 20:18:35
有高氏兄弟的展览都是好展览
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