New Paintings by Wang Guangle Featured at Pace Gallery in New York

TEXT:Sue Wang    DATE: 2014.10.11

Wang Guangle and His Work

Pace Gallery presents an exhibition of new work by Chinese artist Wang Guangle, a pioneer of abstract and conceptual art among his generation, on view at 510 West 25th Street, New York, from October 10 through November 1. The exhibition surveys his approach to abstraction by featuring nine new works from three series, including four Untitled paintings( begun 2007), four Coffin Paint works( begun in 2004), and one painting extending from his Terrazzo series( begun in 2002). Pace will publish a catalogue to accompany the exhibition, which includes a new essay by Dan Cameron, chief curator at the Orange County Museum of Art, California.

Although each series emerged at different times during the artist’s career, he now often works simultaneously on all three in an organic manner, as he points out: “when I was working on Terrazzo, Coffin Paint, and Untitled, I didn’t distinguish much between them, though they developed a complementary relationship as I worked.” Wang has gained critical praise for his traditional memento mori, temporality, repetition, and abstraction. Deriving from a traditional practice, Wang produces his Coffin paintings by working with his canvas resting flat on the studio floor, systematically applying layers of acrylic paint in alternating colors–at times monochromatic, at times colorful–resulting in a densely stratified surface.

Wang Guangle, Coffin Paint 14019, 2014; acrylic on canvas, 90x90cm

Wang Guangle, Coffin Paint 14019, 2014; acrylic on canvas, 90x90cm

An extension of the Coffin Paint series, his large-scale Untitled works evolve from the same technique. Here, however, each layer of paint is applied from the far edges of the canvas working inward toward the center, thus resulting in an illusionistic depth, the lighter tones of the composition acting as a framing device. As with the Coffin Paint series, each painting is provided with a numeric title indicating the year, month, and day of its completion. Each stroke of paint signifies a moment in time, an amalgamation of gesture, which in completion becomes a meditation on temporality. Wang reveals, “the most important thing is not the ‘what’ of painting, but the ‘how.’”

The Coffin Paint series was inspired by a burial tradition he witnessed while growing up in Fujian province, southern China, where it is customary for the elderly to cope with their impending mortality by acquiring a casket and painting it in red lacquer, adding a coat of paint every year one the same date as a celebration of longevity. A meditative symbol of acceptance and preparation, the coffin can incur several years’ worth of paint layers up until the moment of a person’s passing. In this way, Wang’s method evokes a strong metaphor, relating to Chinese cultural identity as much as it relates to conceptual art practices.

Wang Guangle, 140722, 2014; acrylic on canvas, 280x180cm

Wang Guangle, 140722, 2014; acrylic on canvas, 280x180cm

One of his earliest abstract series, Wang’s Terrazzo paintings related to the personal sphere, specifically the terrazzo tiled floors of his childhood home. The artist states: “My memories of my home are bound up inseparably with this material. When I paint it, I feel freed from specific forms–I can virtually look inward. The Terrazzo paintings are decidedly minimalist in approach, abstractions of time and gesture. The artist applies paint to the canvas surface, millimeter by millimeter, often taking months to meticulously accumulate brushstrokes into large-scale renderings of marble tile. A profound manifestation of his Terrazzo series is evidenced in the nonextant mural, The Wall (2004). With his studio earmarked for demolition, the artist painted an entire wall of the space throughout the course of one month. The building was razed shortly after the mural’s completion, a potent symbol of transience. “In a perfect world, art would disappear,” says Wang, “Or rather, once art had helped the world become perfect, it would then allow itself to disperse.”

Wang Guangle, Coffin Paint 140803, 2014; acrylic on canvas, 80x80cm

Wang Guangle, Coffin Paint 140803, 2014; acrylic on canvas, 80x80cm

About the artist

Wang Guangle (b. 1976, Songxi, Fujian province) trained at the Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing, where he graduated in 2000 and was awarded first prize in the annual academy contest for his thesis piece, 3 to 5 p.m. Regarded as a leader among China’s younger generation of painters, he is a member of N12, a group of twelve graduates of the Central Academy of Fine Arts who began staging exhibitions together in 2003.

The artist has been the subject of one-artist exhibitions including Untitled (2011) and Wang Guangle (2008) at Beijing Commune. Recent group exhibitions include Focues Beijing, De Heus-Zomer Collection, Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam (2014); the groundbreaking show ON|OFF: China’ Young Artists in Concept and Practice, Ullens Center for Contemporary Art Beijing (2013), a comprehensive survey of the generation of Chinese artist born at the end of the Cultural Revolution and at the dawn of the country’s ear of reform; as well as the 2013 California-Pacific Triennial, Orange County Museum of Art, Newport Beach, CA, showcasing the most innovative art produced throughout the Pacific rim. Wang was also included in the first two installments of Beijing Voice, Pace Beijing (2011, 2010), an annual group show that considers and interprets current phenomena and ideas in contemporary art. Examples of Wang Guangle’s work can be found in the Rubell Family Collection, Miami, Florida, as well as the De Heus-Zomer Collection, Netherlands.

A forthcoming monograph, Wang Guangle, published by Hatie Cantz is slated for release in 2015. Wang Guangle lives and works in Beijing. This is his second solo exhibition with Pace.

Courtesy of the artist and Pace Gallery, for further information please contact Madeline Lieberberg at 212. 421.3192/mlieberberg@pacegallery.com.