Wang Lifeng
Poetry in History: The Visual Narrative of Wang Lifeng: Dao Zi
Since the turn of the new century, Wang Lifeng has persisted in creating works of art with strong cultural and historical consciousness, such as The Great Han Dynasty, The Great Song Dynasty and The Great Ming Dynasty. Recently, using traditional Chinese ink in solid form, Wang Lifeng has produced astounding sculptural installation pieces. Looking at these works by an artist in the prime of his artistic life, how are we to access its value and meaning? Can contemporary visual art interpret history? Is this art different from historical records used by historians? Is it possible for experimental art to express the meaning of history? People read historical records to understand history, but standard historical texts, which are often called primary narration, are actually official revisions of authorized history. It resulted in legitimizing historical knowledge in a unified text, designed to empower authoritarian rulers.
Consequently, contemporary philosophers have asserted that Chinese history is produced by a historiographic culture. Postmodernists believe historical knowledge is neither absolute nor objective. In the end, what exist are contemporary thought and the political creation of relative knowledge. Though primary narration originates from the Scientific Revolution, new advances in science have caused people to doubt its validity,especially its political connotations—the influence of which even science cannot avoid. The historical function of past figures’ playing decisiveroles became diluted, leaving behind a narrative within a linguistic system of representation; yet narration was not the only means of representationin which people could also use description, interpretation and visualization. Understanding the goal of history is also to understand and to seek historical truth, but who and which text decides this truth? Does history belong to the truth of the past or the suspicions of today?
The face is the body’s soul, and culture is history’s face. The expression in Wang Lifeng’s work is not historical time, but rather a kind of rhythmic time. This rhythmic time abandons the dialectics, teleology and objectivity implied in the relation of original time and tries to use a morec onceptualized approach to expressing the richness and pluralism of culture and history.
History paintings, in the context of art history, are recreations commemorating a famous historical personage or event, but history paintings cannot invent history. Primary narration of history is just the painter defining his or her subject matter—in other words, an accepted version from others. Artists use this as a building block to depict the themes that conform to current mainstream ideas and viewpoints. There is little tolerance for artists who used subjectivity and historical creativity in their work. From the beginning, Wang Lifeng has abandoned these models of history painting.
He rejects the so-called grand fabrication of realism—“objectively recreating historical truth”—and instead consciously succeeds in the Chinese tradition of “taking the truths and misfortunes of the past and putting them into today’s works.” As the writer Qian Zhongshu once said, “Poetry is history’s pen; history is at the heart of poetry.” In Ancient China, scholars wrote poems and read history, and, for the most part, poetry glorified history. Poetry, unlike other modes of expression, was the literary vehicle by which historical events, knowledge and meaning were expressed and disseminated.
The expressions of historical events, knowledge and meaning all have specific contexts: their own historical environments. The originality of Wang Lifeng lies in his utilization of visual imagery to construct a historical environment, laying bare deep layers and connotations of the meaning of historical fact. The meaning of cultural history lies in the fact that it exists in intelligible things—things we understand, including the true and the false. Wang Lifeng does not cater to the tastes of his audiences but challenges them.
He does not attempt to speak for cultural history; however, he allows cultural history to speak through him with its own unique rhythm, flavour and individual temperament. Consequently, just by looking at the wispy, faint imagery in Wang Lifeng’s pieces, one realizes what is being presented is anti-narration demanding introspection. Imagery portrays the autonomy of aesthetics and history’s twinkling symbolism—a concept painstakingly pursued by Wang Lifeng that makes his work so unique and multi-faceted. Each of his series (The Great Han Dynasty, The Great Song Dynasty or The Great Ming Dynasty) has been highly purified and distilled leaving behind only the feelings and mood of the main body: quiet but forceful, sorrowful yet brilliant, sincere yet dispirited almost to the point of despair. What it reveals is an artist highly attuned and skilled at portraying culture and history through imagery.
Wang Lifeng: Old Colour, Old Smell, New Medium:Tally Beck
Wang Lifeng’s artistic trajectory is distinctive and unique in Chinese contemporary art. While many of his compatriots have focused on exploring cynicism expressed in the vocabulary of Pop Art, Wang mines history both real and imagined to concatenate past, present and future in his own personal idiom. An impresario of mixed media, he creates abstract compositions from which readable cultural signifiers emerge.
Wang admits to being a romanticist, and this is evident in the titles he gives to his series. He celebrates graceful elegance, opulent texture and international appeal in The Great Ming Dynasty. Fragments of silk commingle with old documents amid Wang’s expressive oil painting on the canvases. His careful juxtaposition and injection of his own gesture tell us that he is not attempting an objective narration but rather uniting collective memory and personal imagination. Wang’s background in stage design is evident in his work. His compositions suggest a setting and an ambiance. Visual clues give us historical bearings, and his painterly abstraction creates a discernible mood. He effectively controls the elements to evoke a dreamlike vision while reining in the ethereal nebulousness with emphatic historicity.
The latest works in The Great Ming Dynasty literally reach out to the viewer. Wang, already having mastered inviting textures, heightens the sensory experience. He inventively incorporates traditional Chinese ink in its solid form into his works. This novel addition adds further texture, dimension and scent to his engaging compositions.
Wang makes his own solid ink according to the traditional recipe. He combines lampblack with gelatine, crushed cloves and borneol, a variety of camphor. After pouring the mixture into moulds of his own creation, he allows it to set. The result is a highly sculptural work of art that carries with it the pungent smell of traditional ink. He describes the effect with the old Chinese saying, “Old colour, old smell,” which suggests the sensory nostalgia experienced when specific sensations transport us to another place and time.
The pieces give a surreal impression. Elegantly styled Ming furnishings seem to break free from the jet-black stone in a Michelangelesque sculptural manner. The texture of the solid ink recalls the abstraction of traditional Chinese mountain landscapes, and the accents of real bronze elements are iconic of China’s opulent, material past. Wang’s wit is evident in his etching of Chinese characters into the solid ink—charming grace notes that reveal his inventive imagination.
While the new works are a further articulation of the artist’s style, they also serve to demonstrate his fearlessness and versatility. These behemoth compositions, dominated by dark black and metallic solidity, subvert the dreamy lightness of the earlier works. Wang concentrates on the mastery of this innovative medium and focuses on the weighty volumes it provides. Cloudy colour gradations and white space give way to anchored, terrestrial solidity. Nevertheless, he imbues these works with an energy that breathes life into them. In spite of the daunting stasis that would seem inherent in this medium, Wang makes them appear fluid and malleable.
Wang’s uniqueness lies in his ability to remain focused on the iconography of China’s past while simultaneously inventing a new visual language in which to portray it. He embraces ambiguity and paradox and transforms them into tools with which he forges his own subjective view of history.
1962 |
Born in Inner Mongolia |
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1979 |
Began Oil Painting and Wood Sculpture |
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1986 |
Graduated in Stage Design, Central Academy of Theatre, Beijing |
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Stage Designer, Beijing Peoples’ Theatre of the Arts |
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Present: |
Lives and works in Beijing |
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Solo Exhibitions |
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2018 |
Behind the Curtain of the Boudoir, Red Gate Gallery, Beijing |
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Archives of Longing, Vermilion Art, Sydney |
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2016 |
Ji Series - Paper Characters, Beijing Lotus Art Museum, Beijing |
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2014 |
Inside Out – Wang Lifeng Art Work 2014 Tour, Zhejiang West Lake Gallery / Hangzhou, Meijiang International Art Museum / Tianjin, Shenzhen Convention & Exhibition Center / Shenzhen, Winshare Art Museum / Chengdu, 798 Jindu Art Gallery / Beijing |
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2013 |
Ji, Red Gate Gallery, Beijing |
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2012 |
Retrospective, 798 Enjoy Art Museum, Beijing |
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2010 |
My Abstract Way, Jindu Art Gallery, Beijing |
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2009 |
Qing Mountain Series, Galerie Du Monde, Hong Kong |
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2008 |
Qing Mountain Series, China Visual Arts Center, Beijing |
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Qing Mountain Series, Gefeng Art Center, Shenzhen |
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Great Song Series, Brussels |
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2007 |
The Great Ming Dynasty, Red Gate Gallery |
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2005 |
Great Song Series, Red Gate Gallery Great Song Series, Munich, Germany |
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2003 |
Great Han Series, J Gallery, Hong Kong |
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Great Han Series, Red Gate Gallery |
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2002 |
Great Tang Series, Yi Bo Gallery, Shanghai |
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2000 |
Spring and Autumn Series, Red Gate Gallery |
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1999 |
Warring States Series, Red Gate Gallery |
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1998 |
Brilliance Series, Red Gate Gallery |
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1997 |
Dynasty Series, Red Gate Gallery |
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1996 |
Hui Series, Red Gate Gallery |
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1995 |
Purity Series, Red Gate Gallery |
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1993 |
National Language Series, Red Gate Gallery |
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1989 |
Double Crane Gallery, Seattle |
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1987 |
2nd Wood Sculpture Exhibition, French Embassy, Beijing |
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1986 |
1st Wood Sculpture Exhibition, Friendship Hotel, Beijing |
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Group Exhibitions |
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2018 |
Art Wonderland ·Mutual Prosperity – Chinese and Australian Contemporary Art, Enjoy Art Museum, Beijing |
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2017 |
Abstract Art of China, Suzhou Art Museum, Suzhou |
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Chinese Abstract Art, Dongguan Convention and Exhibition Art Center, Guangzhou |
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Red Gate on the Move, Red Gate Gallery |
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Sharing – Contemporary Art, 798 Enjoy Art Museum, Beijing |
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2016 |
My Living Room – Red Gate 25th Anniversary Exhibition, Red Gate Gallery |
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2015 |
In or Out, Beijing Lotus Art Museum, Beijing |
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2014 |
Paper · Being, Tian Jin Art Museum, Tianjin |
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Here and Now, Meijiang Art Center, Tianjin |
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2013 |
Australia· China 2013 Contemporary Artists, Meijiang Art Center, Tianjin |
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The World - Chinese Contemporary Ink Painting Artists, Prajna Art Foundation, Hong Kong |
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Chinese Installation Art, Museum of Contemporary Art Beijing, Beijing |
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2012 |
The Splendor of the Century - Contemporary Oil Painting, Art Museum of Beijing Fine Art Academy, Beijing |
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Two Generations - 20 Years of Chinese Contemporary Art Australian Tour: City of Sydney Chinese New Year; Manning Regional Gallery; Damien Minton Gallery; University of Newcastle Gallery; Melbourne International Fine Arts (MiFA); Linton & Kay, Perth |
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2011 |
Wang He Art, Deng Ming Wan He Art Museum |
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20 Years - Two Generations of Artists at Red Gate, island6 Art Center, Shanghai |
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20 Years - Two Generations of Artists at Red Gate, Red Gate Gallery |
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2010 |
China Abstract TOP, Hangzhou |
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China Abstract TOP, Today Art Museum |
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Our Journey of Abstraction, Jindu Art Gallery |
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Trickery and Metamorphisis, Jinbao Art Museum, The Fourth Space |
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Times – No Boundaries, Henan Art Museum |
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2009 |
Mongolia : Mongolia, Red Gate Gallery |
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60th Anniversary Contemporary Art, National Centre for the Performing Arts |
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Back to Modern Times – 09 Chinese Abstract Art, Xi Hu Art Museum |
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Contemporary Power of Chinese Abstract Art, Tap Seac Gallery, Macau |
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2008 |
Culture Chinese Phenomena, Anderson Gallery, Switzerland |
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Red Gate Stars, Red Gate Gallery |
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2007 Chinese Contemporary Art Document, Century Wall, Beijing |
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2007 |
Shanghai Art Fair, Tolman Gallery, USA |
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Artists in Residence Work-In-Progress Preview, NY Arts Beijing Space |
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Contemporary Cultural Venation – China Version, Today Art Museum |
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Chinese Text of Abstract Art, Ningbo Art Museum, Ningbo |
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Critical Thread, First Sound Gallery, Beijing |
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2006 |
Tolman Collection, Tokyo |
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Red Gate Gallery’s 15th Anniversary |
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Asian Art Interchange Show, Changwon Art Museum, South Korea |
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Chinese Text of Abstract Art, Shanghai Art Museum |
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2006 Chinese Contemporary Art Document, The China Millennium |
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Monument Museum, Beijing |
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2005 |
Passion and Force: Eight Artists, 798 Yan Gallery, Beijing |
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2004 |
Angle: Traveling Exhibition of Artists from Beijing, Nanjing and Shanghai |
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2002 |
Shang Yuan Artists, Macao City Hall |
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Great Tang Series, J Gallery, Hong Kong |
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2001 |
Clues to the Future – Red Gate Gallery’s 10th Anniversary |
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1998 |
Retake: A Selection Reviewing Red Gate Artists’ Signature Works, |
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Red Gate Gallery |
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1997 |
Works Featured in the 1994 - 1998 BHP Calendars |
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1996 |
Red Gate Gallery’s 5th Anniversary |
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1995 |
3rd National Oil Painting Exhibition, National Art Gallery of China, Beijing |
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1991 |
Inaugural Exhibition, Red Gate Gallery |
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1984 |
Beijing Art Museum, Temple of Longevity, Beijing |
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Collections |
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BHP, Westinghouse, Beijing Capital Club, Italian Bank of Commerce; Anglo-American; numerous private collections in Switzerland, Germany, Australia, France, Austria, Singapore, Sweden, Hong Kong, USA and Beijing. |
I reflect on and imagine what different periods of Chinese history must have been like. These impressions, expressed in my work, are partly an emotional response and partly informed by my knowledge of traditional cultures.I believe that contemporary society must maintain the essential beliefs and practices of the past in order to transcend superficial and often self-seeking materialism.
Wang Lifeng