Almine Rech Shanghai opens a thematic group show of abstract and figurative paintings

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Tuesday, April 16, 2024


Almine Rech Shanghai opens a thematic group show of abstract and figurative paintings
Sylvie Fleury, Make Up For Ever Ultra HD Blush Palette, 2019, Acrylic on canvas on wood, 154,5 x 192 x 10 cm.



SHANGHAI.- Almine Rech Shanghai welcomes the new spring season, and the hope it represents, with a thematic group show of abstract and figurative paintings, opening on April 17, 2020, by appointment only. Aptly titled Spring, the exhibition will feature a diverse group of artists—spanning a variety of movements, generations, and geographies—that together embody the broad scope of the gallery’s programme: John M Armleder, Todd Bienvenu, Matthias Bitzer, Brian Calvin, Sylvie Fleury, Gregor Hildebrandt, Li Qing, Turi Simeti, Vivian Springford, Xu Qu and Zhang Wei.

Spring will be presented in two distinct sections—one exhibition space will feature abstract works that explode with expressiveness, while a second room will present a group of figurative works that address the subject of self-representation. The intention is to create a dialogue between abstraction and figuration through these two constellations of works in Spring, exploring their relationship across generations of contemporary painting, as well as underlying themes central to both. For example, self-portraiture reveals itself as a core thread through works exploring interior reflection and the chromatic resurfacing of memories.

Among the paintings on display is a work by Swiss artist John M Armleder. Throughout his career, Armleder created a polymorphic body of work encompassing performance, drawings, sculptures and paintings. Panjandrum (2018) belongs to the artist's acclaimed series of Puddle Paintings. The painting is composed with experimental materials such as glitter and lacquer that are splashed on a canvas surface to bring out gestural elements.

The same room will feature a new work by Chinese artist Xu Qu, a former student of Armleder in Germany. Xu Qu’s work is in line with his solo show Currency Wars, which was held at Almine Rech Brussels in 2015. Xu questions the role of currency in our modern society in relation to power, a theme which led to his series of ‘zoomed-in’ works on canvas that explore the design of monetary currency. In Euro 200 (2020), Xu cropped a section of a Euro note, adopting a softer color palette. Once you identify the universal iconographic designs of the currency, the perception of the painting is altered towards abstraction.

In his dramaturgically precise, carefully composed installations, German artist Gregor Hildebrandt offers dynamic visual networks that bridge gaps in our perception of time and space. Herr, erbarme Dich (Bach) (2017) draws on music and underground cultures, arranging and combining visual elements of sound recordings and various recording media such as magnetic tapes on canvas.

Similarly, Z-AC1650 (2016) by Chinese artist Zhang Wei strikes viewers through the immediacy and dynamics of the red and green colors that strive to exert control over each other, leaving the white to capture and diffuse the tension. This is extended beyond the physical borders of the linen. In other words, colors serve as a conduit to emphasize the power of white and emptiness (“Liu Bai” in Chinese). Spring marks the first presentation of Zhang Wei by Almine Rech in one of its premises.

Working with a Color Field vocabulary, as exemplified by her works from the 1970s presented in the next room, American artist Vivian Springford produced an extraordinary series of stain paintings composed of bursts of color on square-shaped canvases.

Springford’s canvases are presented alongside a painting by Turi Simeti. Employing the motif of the oval on a bright yellow canvas, Simeti has developed an irregular writing system that liberates the surface of the canvas from the principles of materiality, allowing nothing but silence and meditation. The elliptic shape is obtained by a handmade wooden matrix and Simeti's modulations that create a tension on the canvas surface.

Exploiting paradoxes and the ambiguity of futility, Sylvie Fleury has a pivotal part to play in Spring. By oversizing everyday objects, such as her series of monumental makeup palettes, she shifts their rigid figuration. By morphing geometry-like compositions in Make Up For Ever Ultra HD Blush Palette(2019), Fleury challenges the relation between desire and power attached to cosmetic objects.

Fleury’s approach to consumerism leads to the second section of the exhibition, which aims to highlight contemporary figurative painting’s stakes across several generations of artists, showcasing the various approaches inherent to self-representation. “When the selfie act, that initially implies self-recognition is transformed into a crowd-pleasing gesture, the subjectivity of the painting subject flees from itself: the body that is spiritually void is like a mirror, reflecting without expressing,” says curator Yang Zi.

Working with a flattened perspective, Brian Calvin is an influential figurative painter who expands beyond portraiture through a close-up treatment of subjects with flat fields of luminous colors. Calvin’s new paintings and works on paper follow an aleatory composition punctuated by the mouths and their shapes; finishing with eyeshere and there, surrealist faces are created.

In a similar manner, Todd Bienvenu’s figurative paintings are expressive and uninhibited. He depicts himself, his relatives, urban scenes and fragments of everyday life. He sees the internet as a way of depicting his own autobiographical universe. Selfie (2018) embodies this renewed interest of contemporary artists in social networks and self-promotion.

Bienvenu’s canvas is presented alongside a work by Berlin-based artist Matthias Bitzer. Bitzer’s work combines drawing, painting and sculpture into an experiential space for exploring both history and identity. Bitzer continues his exploration of history and identity in his gold monochrome paint on canvas and encrusted metal coins, as in his recent work In Door d’or (2019). A mirror effect can be found, hidden beneath this work, interacting with reflection.

The exhibition culminates with Li Qing’s work, Images of Mutual Undoing and Unity·Bacchus (2018), testing the tension and contradiction between image, language, symbol and social space. Qing’s work connects the multi-level elements of experience in series to construct a conflict structure. His new series, Images of Mutual Undoing and Unity, depicts the process of two forms destroyed and merged with one another. Here, a self-portrait by Cindy Sherman mingles with others and brings them together, as she dresses as Caravaggio’s famous painting Bacchus (c. 1596). His observation on the identity of Chinese Art in the context of Global Art reflects his historical consciousness among the younger generation of Chinese artists.










Today's News

April 16, 2020

Claremont Rug Company's Jan David Winitz Explores The World of Antique Caucasian Rugs

Almine Rech Shanghai opens a thematic group show of abstract and figurative paintings

Holly Hendry joins Stephen Friedman Gallery

You can't visit the museum. But your robot can.

Days Soon to Fade: P·P·O·W Gallery opens an online viewing room benefiting the Domestic Violence Project

Exhibition brings together 20 works by some of the most influential photographers of the last century

Coronavirus spurs digital boom in internet auction at Ketterer Kunst

Rare 1868 Brooklyn Atlantics trade card to be auctioned

Luhring Augustine announces representation of Tomm El-Saieh

Art Vancouver 2020 rescheduled

Art Museum of West Virginia University receives $50,000 from Henry Luce Foundation

Most libraries are closed. Some librarians still have to go in.

2020 Sobey Art Award announces longlist artists

Toys, shoes, passport photos: Remembering Afghanistan's dead

Finbarr O'Reilly awarded 11th Carmignac Photojournalism Award on the Democratic Republic of Congo

Henry Graff, Columbia historian of presidents, dies at 98

A 'full deck' of Chekhov, with the translators as the wild cards

Becca Hoffman to lead Intersect Art and Design: Art Aspen, SOFA Chicago, and Art Palm Springs

Lone bell chime marks Notre-Dame fire anniversary

Neue Auctions' sale will feature books, library furnishings and Natural History and orthinological prints

Most artists have only two months cash to survive coronavirus

Maak confirms their spring auction, Unifying Eye: The Dayabandhu Collection

Artcurial Motorcars celebrates its 10th anniversary

Kimarlee Nguyen, writer who explored Cambodian roots, dies at 33

Botox Treatment for skin

The Most Common Mistakes When Playing in a Casino

Factors for The Causes of Mesothelioma

Emerald: Spiritual Properties and Benefits

What to look for when choosing an online betting website?

You Should Never Commit These 7 Mistakes While Vaping

5 Amazing Insights on Choosing Artwork for Your Living Space

When Older Relatives Shrug at Coronavirus Restrictions

How to Make a Woman Orgasm and Beg for More?




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful