Photography of "Damaged Landscape" Presented by 798 Photo Gallery

TEXT:Sue Wang    DATE: 2014.8.4

Poster of Damaged Landscape

The marvellous spectacle of urbanization with more metaphor comes from the symbol reconstruction and sale in new landscape movement, like the reappearance of Epang Palace (Running out of financial resources, it still faces the crisis of being demolished.) in ancient times and the names (Oriental Hawaii, Chanson and Thames Town) of various developers in modern times. The absurdity of the tide of “faking” symbols incurred by new landscape movement just lies in a favorable turn in which absurdity is distorted due to the intervention, move and even falsification of original landscape. The exhibited works of three artists all avoid the landscape with large scale, but deeply demonstrate other unusual sceneries.

In the series Daily Life, Li Yong from the Northeast shows “abnormal” daily life. On the one hand, he retains the scenery for reconnaissance on the spot of Joel Sternfeld; on the other hand, he releases his unknown poetic feelings based on surrounding landscape. These poetic feelings are “the graceful gauze given by him to reality”.

LY-03 Riverside  (Photographer  Li Yong) Work from Damaged Landscape 01

LY-03 Riverside (Photographer Li Yong) Work from Damaged Landscape 01

LY-05 Riverside  (Photographer  Li Yong) Work from Damaged Landscape 02

LY-05 Riverside (Photographer Li Yong) Work from Damaged Landscape 02

Li Ming from Qinghai starts the traveling dream in the childhood triggered by his elder generation and sets foot on the Silk Road which is like an old phaeton full of smiles. However, his journey is disappointing. His poetic feelings are not aroused. Instead, he picks up those landscape fragments left by history. These landscape fragments involve belief, industry and daily life, etc. The road is deserted. The flocks of sheep which are expelled nearly go to the end of the earth. All sceneries are exiled.

LM-02  (Photographer  Li Ming), Work from Damaged Landscape 03

LM-02 (Photographer Li Ming), Work from Damaged Landscape 03

LM-14  (Photographer  Li Ming) Work from Damaged Landscape 03

LM-14 (Photographer Li Ming) Work from Damaged Landscape 03

Hua Weicheng who lives in Chongqing takes his road to the north and keeps a close eye on the dramatic adventures of landscape, namely a fairy mountain to be eradicated, a pavilion in muddy wilderness, a huge flagon tilted down to the ground by mountain road, the forgotten Avalokitesvara statues standing near the water and the rusty guideboards in the desert and so on. Standing for a warning and recall, but also banter and doubt, his work End of Ashes seems to be prosperous like a dreamland, but be lonesome and realistic in fact.

HWC-02 The Wall  (Photographer  Hua Weicheng), Work from Damaged Landscape 05

HWC-02 The Wall (Photographer Hua Weicheng), Work from Damaged Landscape 05

HWC-15 No Title I  (Photographer  Hua Weicheng), Work from Damaged Landscape 06

HWC-15 No Title I (Photographer Hua Weicheng), Work from Damaged Landscape 06

About the exhibition

Dates: August 2 - September 10

Venue: 798 Photo Gallery

Address: No.4 Jiuxianqiao Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing. P.O.BOX 100015-85, Beijing 100015, China

Courtesy of the artist and 798 Photo Gallery.