Esther Schipper

CYLWXZ

17 Jun - 23 Aug 2008

CYLWXZ, Installation view at Esther Schipper, Berlin, 2008
CYLWXZ
Chu Yun, Liu Wei, Xu Zhen
Curated by Philip Tinari
17.06.2008 – 23.08.2008

The exhibition CYLWXZ takes as its starting point the consciously made-invisible. A wall divides the gallery space exactly in two geometric halves, only one part is accessible. This radical intervention is a collaborative gesture authored by the three artists in concert and resonating with strands in each of their individual artistic practices: Liu Wei's series of "cutting" works, Chu Yun's post-minimalist architectural interventions, Xu Zhen's 2002 exhibition cutting of a Shanghai warehouse space into equal and identical halves. The wall inside of the gallery is painted with a white pigment that refuses to dry. Wet Paint (2008) by Xu Zhen creates a cramped and unpleasant atmosphere in the space that is already minimised.

There are two historic works presented on the wall: Liu Wei's six-channel video Hard to Restrain, first exhibited in the original Post-Sense Sensibility show in 1999, and Xu Zhen's The Last Few Mosquitos (2005) in which insects suck the blood of the exhibition wall. The artists presented in the exhibition are an unwilling sample of a particular moment and generation in the development of contemporary aesthetic practice in China. Coming from three distinct urban perspectives (Chu Yun from Shenzhen, Liu Wei from Beijing, Xu Zhen from Shanghai) they began their careers in distinct relationships with the wave of avant-garde exhibitions in Beijing and Shanghai in the late. They have matured against the background of an ever increasing skepticism about the relevance of this very category. The naming of the exhibition using simply the initials of the three artists in alphabetical order as well as the basic gesture of a largely empty main gallery space, are responses to the quandary of what exactly it means to present art from China internationally at a moment when the multicultural imperatives that drove the "China shows" of the 1990s have evaporated and yet a real and tangible gap between "Chinese" and "international" discourses lingers awkwardly.

In the upstairs rooms of the galleries, a selection of historic works from the past decade presents a fuller picture of the divergences and convergences in these three artists' practices. For further information or image material, please contact Nina Köller: koeller@estherschipper.com
 

Tags: Liu Wei, Hu Yun, Xu Zhen