Ruoyu Gong’s Long Way Around at Eli Klein Gallery unfolds as a compelling portrait of an artist recalibrating his relationship to painting. Rather than framing the exhibition as a simple “return,” the works reveal a deep integration of prior experimentation into a more personal painterly language. What emerges is not a retreat from material inquiry, but a transformation of it—where the memory of collage, monotype, and bas-relief persists as a psychological and spatial sensibility within oil.
Across works produced between 2023 and 2026, Gong constructs images that hover between figuration and dissolution. Forms flicker at the threshold of legibility: a figure seems to surface only to be absorbed into the atmosphere; a landscape stabilizes briefly before slipping into ambiguity. This instability functions as the exhibition’s conceptual engine, mirroring the tensions that have long animated Gong’s practice—control and accident, irony and vulnerability, endurance and absurdity.
Central to this trajectory is the donkey motif, a recurring presence in Gong’s earlier works. Made through protruding bas-relief structures and found-object interventions, the donkey embodied labor, subjugation, and the tragicomic weight of persistence. In the recent paintings, however, the motif undergoes a subtle yet significant metamorphosis. The donkey is less an object than an afterimage: a residue embedded within gesture, posture, or spatial rhythm. By loosening the motif’s literal visibility, Gong shifts its function from symbol to condition—something felt rather than declared.
The exhibition’s emotional register is equally nuanced. Gong’s engagement with self-deprecating humor—inspired by traditional Chinese comedy Xiangsheng—operates here as a destabilizing force. Humor does not deflate seriousness; it complicates it. Moments of visual wit coexist with passages of lyrical melancholy, producing a viewing experience marked by oscillation rather than resolution.
Spatially, the paintings retain a sculptural awareness without relying on physical extension. Gong orchestrates depth through chromatic fields, veils of translucency, and shifting perspectival cues. The picture plane breathes, contracts, and opens again. This sensitivity to spatial dynamics recalls his earlier material disruptions, now internalized into paint handling and compositional drift.
Cultural memory threads quietly through the exhibition. References to Chinese visual and symbolic vocabularies surface not as illustrations but as fragments—filtered, distorted, and reconfigured through a Western painterly framework. Gong resists the didactic pull of explicit cultural signposting, allowing instead for a slow read in which memory operates as atmosphere. The result is a body of work that speaks less about identity as a fixed category than as a site of continuous negotiation.
Long Way Around positions painting as an arena of temporal accumulation. The canvases feel lived-in, bearing traces of detours, revisions, and suspended conclusions. Gong’s achievement lies in embracing this indirectness: the “long way” becomes not delay, but method. In these works, painting is both inquiry and encounter—a space where contradiction is sustained, perception is unsettled, and meaning remains productively open.