Zhan Rui
19 May - 19 Jun 2011
© Zhan Rui
May 5th 2010 to July 24th 2010 – Variations in the Weather No.1, 2010
Acrylic on canvas
190x190cm
May 5th 2010 to July 24th 2010 – Variations in the Weather No.1, 2010
Acrylic on canvas
190x190cm
ZHAN RUI
The Stock Exchange, Weather and Sex
19 May – 19 June, 2011 (Exhibition Extended)
Boers-Li Gallery is pleased to announce a solo exhibition of work by Zhan Rui entitled “The Stock Exchange, Weather, and Sex,” opening 19 May and extending through 19 June. The show will include some dozen paintings produced by the artist, all of which generally appear as abstract grids of nine by nine squares in simple colors of varying tone. Though this superficial abstraction may cause us to mistakenly relate these works to cold abstraction and color field painting, it is not, in fact, the aesthetic inclination of artist or audience that motivates their forms; they actually consist of documentation of the behaviors of people, society, and nature. In the works in this exhibition we see elements including the Chinese stock exchange, the weather in Wuhan, and the sex lives of people around the artist.
Zhan Rui uses red and green to represent the gains and losses of certain stocks, while triangles oriented in different directions represent the weather, and, different interviewees choose colors that relate to sex. After completing this foundational setup, the paintings automatically take form throughout a period of 81 days- a significant number in Chinese, for which the phrase “when all is said and done” is rendered colloquially as “nine and nine become one.”
Critic Sun Dongdong has commented that “As Zhan Rui introduces information into painting through a surface of modularity, so-called ‘painterliness’ becomes a form of useless information.” These paintings do not belong to the category of abstract painting that moves far from society and strives for pure sensation but rather stand as circumstantial recordings of information, drawing together the complexity of social information and the purity of abstract painting and perhaps ultimately reducing different social, environmental, and individual actions into colors and shapes that represent different forms of information. Through this method the elegant and orderly painting both manifests the anitya or impermanence noted in traditional cultural and makes immaterial the subjectivity and ‘painterliness’ of abstract art.
Zhan Rui was born in 1980 in Wuhan in Hubei province, where he currently lives and works. He graduated from the oil painting department of the Hubei Institute of Fine Arts in 2004 and the University of the Arts London in 2006. Recent exhibitions include, Art Breakthrough, at the National Agricultural Exhibition Center in Beijing and, Youth Upstairs: 2010 Nomination Exhibition by Young Critics at the Times Art Museum in Beijing.
The Stock Exchange, Weather and Sex
19 May – 19 June, 2011 (Exhibition Extended)
Boers-Li Gallery is pleased to announce a solo exhibition of work by Zhan Rui entitled “The Stock Exchange, Weather, and Sex,” opening 19 May and extending through 19 June. The show will include some dozen paintings produced by the artist, all of which generally appear as abstract grids of nine by nine squares in simple colors of varying tone. Though this superficial abstraction may cause us to mistakenly relate these works to cold abstraction and color field painting, it is not, in fact, the aesthetic inclination of artist or audience that motivates their forms; they actually consist of documentation of the behaviors of people, society, and nature. In the works in this exhibition we see elements including the Chinese stock exchange, the weather in Wuhan, and the sex lives of people around the artist.
Zhan Rui uses red and green to represent the gains and losses of certain stocks, while triangles oriented in different directions represent the weather, and, different interviewees choose colors that relate to sex. After completing this foundational setup, the paintings automatically take form throughout a period of 81 days- a significant number in Chinese, for which the phrase “when all is said and done” is rendered colloquially as “nine and nine become one.”
Critic Sun Dongdong has commented that “As Zhan Rui introduces information into painting through a surface of modularity, so-called ‘painterliness’ becomes a form of useless information.” These paintings do not belong to the category of abstract painting that moves far from society and strives for pure sensation but rather stand as circumstantial recordings of information, drawing together the complexity of social information and the purity of abstract painting and perhaps ultimately reducing different social, environmental, and individual actions into colors and shapes that represent different forms of information. Through this method the elegant and orderly painting both manifests the anitya or impermanence noted in traditional cultural and makes immaterial the subjectivity and ‘painterliness’ of abstract art.
Zhan Rui was born in 1980 in Wuhan in Hubei province, where he currently lives and works. He graduated from the oil painting department of the Hubei Institute of Fine Arts in 2004 and the University of the Arts London in 2006. Recent exhibitions include, Art Breakthrough, at the National Agricultural Exhibition Center in Beijing and, Youth Upstairs: 2010 Nomination Exhibition by Young Critics at the Times Art Museum in Beijing.