"Re:Painting"--a group exhibition focusing on contemporary paintings opens at Platform China

TEXT:Sue Wang    DATE: 2012.3.3

Poster of Re: Painting
What moves men of genius, or rather, what inspires their work, is not a new idea, but their obsession with the idea that what has been said already is still not enough.

- Eugène Delacroix

Ever since 1893 when, in response to the invention of the daguerreotype, Paul Delaroche famously exclaimed, “From today, painting is dead,” the argument over whether painting is actually dead or not has remained one of the most persistent debates of the modern and post-modern eras. To continue this dispute, much less partake in it, is no longer interesting, nor relevant. It is, however, important to keep this piece of Art history in mind when looking at Contemporary paintings.

Song Yuanyuan-The House of Romance, 2011; oil painting, 250×180cm

Song Yuanyuan-The House of Romance, 2011; oil painting, 250×180cm

Xiao Bo-Microphones, 2010; oil on canvas, 80×60cm

Xiao Bo-Microphones, 2010; oil on canvas, 80×60cm

Jia Aili-Untitled, 2011; ink on paper, 80×60cm

Jia Aili-Untitled, 2011; ink on paper, 80×60cm

Sun Xun-Imperial Theory Of Evolution,2011; ink on paper, 1100×90cm

Sun Xun-Imperial Theory Of Evolution,2011; ink on paper, 1100×90cm

Ma Ke-Car Accident at night, 2009; oil painting, 124×214cm

Ma Ke-Car Accident at night, 2009; oil painting, 124×214cm

Rather than classifying painting as something that is either dead or alive, it would be more appropriate to think of it as a reoccurring medium of expression that is continuously being reinvented. To the viewer, a painting exists only as it is being viewed, but the context of a painting, inconstant and temporal, is at the same time autonomous from and interconnected with the world around it. Thus the painting, as we view it, and the context that we view it under, becomes a moment of transition between past and future in this recurrent cycle.

“Re: Painting” is a group of artists brought together in three separate exhibition spaces under the context of one exhibition. Each exhibition space has work by the same group of artists, creating three different but related directions.

For all that we know and say about painting, it is equally true that there is nothing we can know or say about painting.

Bi Jianye-Heaven's Peach, 2011; oil painting, 20×50cm

Bi Jianye-Heaven's Peach, 2011; oil painting, 20×50cm

Huang Liang-Mirror,Time, 2011; oil painting,100×80cm

Huang Liang-Mirror,Time, 2011; oil painting,100×80cm

Xiao Jiang-Alcohol, 2010; oil on canvas,120×180cm

Xiao Jiang-Alcohol, 2010; oil on canvas,120×180cm

Qin Qi-Flower Room, 2011; oil painting, 250×150cm

Qin Qi-Flower Room, 2011; oil painting, 250×150cm

Qi Wenzhang- Untitiled, 2009; oil painting, 90×120cm

Qi Wenzhang- Untitiled, 2009; oil painting, 90×120cm

Date: March 3rd--April 15th, 2012

Venue: Platform China

Artists: Bi Jianye, Gong Jian, Huang Liang, Hexie Baroque Group, Jia Aili, Jiang Guozhe, Ma Ke, Ou Yangchun,Qin Qi, Qi Wenzhang, Song Yuanyuan, Sun Xun, Wang Xingjie, Wang Guangle, Wu Guang Yu, Xiao Bo, Xiao Jiang, Yang Rui, Zhou Yilun, Zhang Yexing, Zhang Hao.

Courtesy of Platform China, for more information please visit www.platformchina.org.