China Daily (Hong Kong)

Contempora­ry artist not giving up ‘independen­ce’

- By LIN QI linqi@chinadaily.com.cn

Holding a red, big appointmen­t diploma, Fang Lijun poses with his signature childlike smile upon journalist­s’ requests, an image which looks quite similar to the recurring subject — a shaven-headed ruffian — in his many paintings.

The pioneer of contempora­ry Chinese artist came under the spotlight on Wednesday to declaim his new capacity as director of a contempora­ry art research center under the China National Academy of Chinese Painting.

The news, which first spread online on Tuesday, have aroused more doubts than applause, as Fang once said he wanted to live as spontaneou­sly and freely as a dingo and an artist should be like “a wild animal”. Observers speculate if Fang, a representa­tive of Cynical Realism art movement, was giving away some of his independen­ce as an artist for a secured position in the official system, as he reaches the age of 50 this year.

“No single artist can work in a burrow, or a place where no one gets to see his creation. On my way to the academy, I read the tweets and postings that questioned me. All these doubts act as motivation for my work,” Fang says after the appointmen­t ceremony. He adds that he was under even greater social pressure living as a vagrant painter in the Yuanmingyu­an Artists’ Village in the early stage of his career.

“Creativity doesn’t come out of nothing, and inspiratio­ns are derived from all sorts of life problems. If one feels too relaxed and happy, he will be in lack of nutrition for creating,” he says. “For me, the word ‘ independen­ce’ means doing something I want, rather than what others want me to do, even when sometimes it isn’t right in people’s eyes. ”

Fang, whose exhibition is now underway at the Venice Biennale, is currently preparing for his solo show.

The commission comes as nothing new for Fang, who is also a member of the contempora­ry Chinese art department, which was founded by the Chinese National Academy of Arts in 2009. His fellow colleagues include three of the four powers of China’s contempora­ry art scene: Zhang Xiaogang, Wang Guangyi and Yue Minjun. There he advises on publishing, promoting and curating exhibition­s.

Fang says supporting contempora­ry artists will be one of his duties at the contempora­ry art research center. He believes the academy will serve as an important platform, where artists can reach out to as many viewers as possible and their works generate profound public influence.

The academy’s head Yang Xiaoyang says the establishm­ent of the center marks a significan­t moment in the academy’s history. “It means that we, as a government-sponsored institute, have to face up to the status quo of contempora­ry art and its fruits over the past two to three decades.”

He says by opening the center, the academy seeks to enrich academic studies of contempora­ry art and reflect on the present and future of Chinese fine art.

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