|
The First Art Newspaper on the Net |
|
Established in 1996 |
|
Saturday, November 23, 2024 |
|
Almine Rech presents Xin Ji's first solo show with the gallery |
|
|
Ji Xin, Moon Light, 2022. Oil on canvas, 180 x 15o cm. Ji Xin. © Courtesy of the Artist and Almine.
|
PARIS.- Is I another?
With his large portraits of evanescent women, depicted in graceful, timeless and undulating states between Baudelairean spleen and a somewhat more eastern meditative feel, Ji Xin creates paintings unlike any other artist of his generation.
The formats here are imposing, although the artist has on occasion produced even larger canvases confronting the viewer with almost life-size models, endowed with deformed limbs à la Ingres and, in some, enlarged eyes à la Modigliani. His elegant models appear in equally elegant Art Deco interiors; they are essentially feminine, confronting their moods with actual or imaginary reflections. The pared down colours play with each other in a pastel or ochre palette of solid surfaces. These pieces may feature a form of peaceful, serene mystery, but do not deliberately seek to reference art history modernism as the first glance may suggest. Not to mention direct references - painters always admire those who have enriched their work - for Ji Xin, they are essentially Italian Renaissance. One will find obvious nods to Sandro Botticelli, Fra Angelico or Leonardo da Vinci, discreet tributes in his own vocabulary of poetic undulations, connections with the floral universe, hieratic faces, and an appreciation/fascination for the female character depicted as a goddess or Madonna. The static and muted rendering in his paintings promotes an inner dialogue, expressed on canvas by a double, like a Narcissus reworking Arthur Rimbauds well-known aphorism as Is I another?
Ji Xin is also well versed in the classic art of Chinese painting and forms of genre scenes which he updates and refines in reference to Calendar Paintings popular in Shanghai to this day, or perhaps 18th century representations of the Qing Dynasty, like those of Leng Mei. He is even more fond of artists who have built bridges between Eastern and Western cultures: Matisse was charmed by Chinese calligraphy, of course, but less know in Europe is Lin Fengmian, one of the first Chinese artists to come to study in Dijon, then Paris, from 1918 to 1925. His genteel figurative style portrayed elegant women indoors, or surrounded by flowers. Or SanYu, who lived in Montparnasse in the 1920s where he befriended Matisse - represented female bodies and vegetation in ethereal worlds. Ji Xin cultivates the link between both worlds and, without imposing a clearly recognizable temporality, endows his characters with a self-imposed withdrawal and solitude more conducive to meditation than to disillusion. Also crafted from what may surround him in the studio a piece of furniture, say, or a flower referring to a particular time of the year his canvases stand out as markedly tranquil. The absence of multiple ornaments helps the beholder to focus gaze and thought on the intimate aspects and to try to comprehend the ambiguous figure of the double. Does it personify the subconscious or a spiritual guide? Or is it perhaps a metaphor for the creative, poetic act and a thought which, while it escapes us, spurns us to surpass ourselves?
- Marie Maertens, writer and critic
|
|
Today's News
January 6, 2023
When darkness falls, three friends find ancient art
Jack Hanley Gallery opens exhibition Jeff Williams: Living Things today
Yancey Richardson presents a series of seminal early photographs by Ed Ruscha
Bonhams achieves $1 billion turnover in 2022 for first time in its history
Exhibition of works by Carmen D'Apollonio opens at Friedman Benda
Cohen & Cohen collection of fine Chinese Export porcelain to be offered at Bonhams
Almine Rech presents Xin Ji's first solo show with the gallery
Mary Dill Henry: The Gardens, paintings from the 1980s opens at Berry Campbell Gallery
Galerie Ron Mandos announces the representation of Brussels-based artist Hadassah Emmerich
Launch La - Public Neon Art Exhibition by Donna Gough and David Otis Johnson on view now
AIPAD announces Lydia Melamed Johnson as new Executive Director
Will Boone No Man's Land to open January 7th at Karma, New York
On Remembering for a Future: Maria Thereza Alves exhibits at Michel Rein, Paris
Saatchi Gallery announces exhibition of works created by George Westren
Crescent City Auction Gallery announces highlights included in the Winter Estates Auction
Norton Museum of Art announces Dr. Deborah Willis as the 2023 Artist-in-Residence
Thaddaeus Ropac Seoul opens a group exhibition of new work by three artists
Farewell to 'Stomp,' a show at the beating heart of New York
A tablecloth as source material
Frank Galati, mainstay of Chicago theater, dies at 79
Prototype, an essential New York opera festival, turns 10
Fay Weldon, British novelist who challenged feminist orthodoxy, dies at 91
Danish ceramist, Morten Löbner Espersen opens an exhibition at Jason Jacques Gallery
|
|
|
|
|
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, . |
|
|
|
Royalville Communications, Inc produces:
|
|
|
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
|
|