M+ Sigg Collection: Four decades of Chinese contemporary art exhibition comes to Hong Kong

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Monday, May 20, 2024


M+ Sigg Collection: Four decades of Chinese contemporary art exhibition comes to Hong Kong
A free Digital Exhibition Guide is available on mobile phones and tablets for visitors to enhance their exhibition experience. Courtesy of West Kowloon Cultural District Authority.



HONG KONG.- The tenth edition of the Mobile M+ exhibition series M+ Sigg Collection: Four Decades of Chinese Contemporary Art will take place at ArtisTree in Taikoo Place from 23 February to 5 April 2016.

M+ Sigg Collection: Four Decades of Chinese Contemporary Art is a rigorously curated exhibition of highlights from the M+ Sigg Collection, the largest and the most comprehensive assemblage of Chinese contemporary art in the world, which formed part of the collection of Swiss collector Dr Uli Sigg. This research-based exhibition spans forty years and is the first to tell the fascinating stories behind the emergence and the development of Chinese contemporary art in a chronological format. Comprising more than 80 works of various formats and mediums, including painting, ink art, sculpture, photography, video and installation, the exhibition reflects the changing social era: from the efforts of self-organised collectives, including the No Name Group and Stars Group of the late Cultural Revolution operating on the periphery of the society and outside mainstream discourse, through the radical experiments of Cynical Realism and Political P op artists under the influence of western consumerism in the 1990s, to the consciousness of the artists of the Olympic era bifurcated between East and West, traditional and modern and social engagement; these works are a selection of seminal pieces of contemporary Chinese art history, as well as examples from the vibrant art scene of present-day China.

The exhibition follows a three-chapter approach. The first chapter (1974–1989) introduces underground artistic experiments from No Name Group and Stars Group of the last years of the Cultural Revolution and the 85 New Wave such as the Pond Society, the Northern Art Group and Xiamen Dada, and the development up to the exhibition China/Avant-Garde in 1989. It reveals how the artists manifested self-expression and autonomous thinking, which resulted in an ideological tug of war with the mainstream social realistic arts until the end of the Cold War in 1989.

The second chapter (1990–1999) examines artistic practices and diversity during the post-Cold War era in China. The government’s determination to promote urbanisation and consumerism provided an opportunity for artists to reposition themselves in an international context, particularly within the art market. Yet, this newfound identity triggered cultural anxiety and gave rise to more radical experiments in performance, photography, video, and conceptual art during the mid-1990s.

The final chapter (2000–present) centres on works produced in the pre- and the post-Olympic era, during which China encountered the unprecedented acceleration of globalisation and urbanisation. Artists became conscious of the consequences brought on by these rapid developments; as a result the interpretation of Chinese art and its production shifted from a purely political viewpoint to include new everyday vocabulary. Some artists began to forge a new relationship with tradition, while many others re-entered the arena of ‘social engagement’ in response to the socio-political reality that China faces today.

The M+ Sigg Collection: Four Decades of Chinese Contemporary Art offers multiple entry points and crystallises one of the most remarkable art historical phenomena from the last half-century. The more than 80 works in this exhibition are mostly drawn from the M+ Sigg Collection, which consists of 1,510 Chinese contemporary artworks acquired through a donation and purchase agreement with Dr Uli Sigg, a leading collector of Chinese contemporary art, in June 2012. The M+ Sigg Collection is a coherently and systematically built museum-quality collection. This body of works functions as a historical document, representing the most culturally dynamic period in the history of modern China. It is part of the M+ Collection, which encompasses the disciplines of visual art, design and architecture, and moving image; this allows for that narration of the multi-centred, transnational, and transcultural context of twentieth and twenty-first century visual culture.& nbsp;

Artists in this exhibition (in alphabetical order) include: Ai Weiwei, Cao Fei, Chen Shaoxiong, Chi Xiaoning, Ding Yi, Fang Lijun, Feng Guodong, Geng Jianyi, Hai Bo, Hu Qingyan, Huang Rui, Huang Yong Ping, Kan Xuan, Li Shan, Liang Yuanwei, Lin Yilin, Liu Heung Shing, Liu Jianhua, Liu Wei (b.1965), Liu Wei (b.1972), Liu Xiaodong, Lu Qing, Ma Desheng, Qiu Shihua, Shi Xinning, Song Dong, Wang Guangle, Wang Guangyi, Wang Jin, Wang Keping, Wang Peng, Wang Xingwei, Weng Fen, Xing Danwen, Xu Zhen, Yan Lei, Yang Fudong, Yangjiang Group, Yin Xiuzhen, Yu Hong, Yu Youhan, Yue Minjun, Zeng Fanzhi, Zhan Wang, Zhang Huan, Zhang Peili, Zhang Wei, Zhang Xiaogang, Zheng Guogu, and Zheng Ziyan.










Today's News

February 23, 2016

Large-scale exhibition of Florentine Mannerism opens at the Stadel Museum in Frankfurt

New display features new research into the only surviving painted portraits of Charlotte Brontë with her two sisters

Fitzwilliam Museum's remarkable collection of Egyptian coffins on view in new exhibition

Tate Britain announces world’s most extensive retrospective of the work of David Hockney in 2017

60 paintings, sculptures and installations from the Sonnabend Collection on view in Porto

EDP Foundation announces opening date for new Lisbon Museum of Art, Architecture & Technology

Sotheby's Hong Kong to offer Ming furniture from an Asian Private Collection

'Indiana Jones' and "The Great Gatsby" cinematographer Douglas Slocombe dies at 103

The Hammer Museum presents "Leap Before You Look: Black Mountain College 1933-1957"

Iraqi artist Hussein Adil imagines life in a bomb suit in public performance in the streets of Baghdad

M+ Sigg Collection: Four decades of Chinese contemporary art exhibition comes to Hong Kong

Halcyon Gallery exhibits a brand new body of work by Colombian artist Santiago Montoya

Phillips announces highlights from the upcoming New Now Evening & Day Sales in New York

Items from comic art icons Joe Kubert and Moebius to be offered by Philip Weiss Auctions

Artpace announces cofounders of Ballroom Marfa as honorees for "The Happening" gala

"Sopranos" star Castelluccio showing Guercino and now Francesco de Mura

Umberto Eco's last book to be released Friday

Copley's Winter Sale 2016 realizes $2 million

Expanded role for Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis Chief Curator Jeffrey Uslip

Louidgi Beltrame, winner of the 2014 SAM Prize for Contemporary Art, exhibits at Palais de Tokyo

Jeu de Paume opens exhibition of work by Helena Almeida

Major gifts announced at Bass Museum of Art's fundraiser, The Bass Ball

Work by international artist Wolfgang Tillmans on show at Glasgow's Gallery of Modern Art

Elga Wimmer PCC to present the work of Richard Humann and Triny Prada




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