Global Times

BOUNDARY AND SPACE

Curator-turned-artist Wang Huangsheng makes profession­al debut with the new exhibition

- By Xu Liuliu

The opening ceremony for Wang Huangsheng’s exhibition Boundary/ Space at the Beijing Minsheng Art Museum on Thursday was an important moment for the former curator as it marked the first time in his career he was introduced as a profession­al artist.

Just two months ago, Wang left his position as the curator of the Central Academy of Fine Arts ( CAFA) Art Museum, where he worked for eight years, to focus on his career as an artist.

“Painting is an important part of my life,” Wang told art site HiArt before the exhibition.

“Having been an ‘ amateur’ for years, I finally have time to work on the art that I aspire to. In the past, during my time as a curator, I looked at exhibition­s from a critical and technical perspectiv­e, which made art less fresh to me. But now, that feeling is returning.”

With the help of curator and art critic Wu Hung, also a professor at The University of Chicago, Wang has reorganize­d all the artworks he has created over the years for the new exhibition in order to present his previous “amateur” art career to visitors.

“The visual impact that Wang’s works bring is one of the main reasons that we chose to showcase them. But what’s more, we want to explore the questions that the artist has in his mind. I ask visitors to contemplat­e how the artist transits between boundaries and spaces,” Wu explained at the opening.

The exhibition not only features paintings, but also includes some new installati­on and video works such as Boundaries and Lights. “Boundaries are everywhere, both visible and invisible, between here and there, now and then, reality and aspiration­s, safety and adventure,” Wu wrote in the preface to the exhibition.

“Wang’s artistic experiment­s are rich with exploratio­n, and attempts to probe boundaries and space.”

Due to the artist’s years of experience with traditiona­l Chinese ink wash painting, the brushwork in the artworks have been bestowed with powerful spatiality.

Wang is also known for his concern for and exploratio­n of social realties like war, poverty, illness and religious feuds. Among some of his new works, gauze and wire fences play an important role.

“Gauze represents wounds and wire fences represent violence. One work features gauze that has been dyed red to express complicate­d feelings of pain and atonement,” Wang said, explaining that he was inspired by a trip to Jerusalem last year.

“When standing facing the Wailing Wall, I could feel the mixed feelings that the wall possessed. So I decided to build a wall of human feelings using pieces of gauze, which are a metaphor for injury, isolation, bleeding and healing,” he added.

The exhibition is set to run until September 9.

 ?? Installati­on work Boundaries by Wang Huangsheng Photo: Xu Liuliu/ GT Below: Installati­on work Ge Kong by Wang Huangsheng Photo: Courtesy of Beijing Minsheng Art Museum ??
Installati­on work Boundaries by Wang Huangsheng Photo: Xu Liuliu/ GT Below: Installati­on work Ge Kong by Wang Huangsheng Photo: Courtesy of Beijing Minsheng Art Museum
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