Compiled from the Performing Arts programmes* and Visual Arts exhibition records from HKADC’s Arts Yearbooks and Annual Arts Survey projects dating from 2010.

Lifelines

Visual Arts

Event Detail Image
Art Genres / Sub-categories

Chinese Painting, Calligraphy and Seal Carving

Location

Hong Kong Arts Centre, Pao Galleries

Start Date

2019/09/03

End Date

2019/09/12

Art Genres / Sub-categories

Chinese Painting, Calligraphy and Seal Carving

Location

Hong Kong Arts Centre, Pao Galleries

Start Date

2019/09/03

End Date

2019/09/12

Lifelines

Description

Description

“Lifeline” is a term in English that implies the saving of life when one is in urgent need of help and the connotation of rescue is here intended culturally, as a metaphor for Wang’s lines as cultural thread, just as the trunk of a tree steadily grows upwards, supporting all the branches, his lines form the key element throughout his oeuvre.’ – Katie Hill, Curator

3812 Gallery Hong Kong is honoured to present a solo exhibition by renowned Chinese artist Wang Huangsheng, marking his debut show in Hong Kong. Entitled Lifelines, the exhibition is on view from 3 to 12 September 2019 in Pao Galleries, 5/F, Hong Kong Arts Centre. As an important member of the art world whose roles have navigated being a museum director (currently as Chief Director of Guangzhou Academy of Fine Art Museum and previously as Director of Central Academy of Fine Arts Museum from 2009 to 2017), as well as a founder of large-scale art events such as Guangzhou Triennial and Beijing Photo Biennale, Wang’s artistic practice over the years can indeed be understood as a lifeline. The exhibition is curated by Dr. Katie Hill, Founder and Programme Director of the MA in Modern and Contemporary Asian Art at Sotheby’s Institute of Art, London.

Katie Hill, the curator, comments: ‘Over the years, in his expansive ink practice, Wang’s pursuit of line has departed from a more classical mode in his earlier works to a more experimental abstraction that take various forms – from dense clusters of curvaceous lines lightly swooping in and out to express a sense of uninterrupted movement in space.’ From brush and ink as the principal medium, to textile, resin, newspaper, barbed wire and installation video, Wang continually expands his visual language. He dips cotton gauze in red and makes rubbings on paper, wraps barbed wire with gauze and squeezes sharp-edged wires through glass tubes which scatter into fragments. His action and works resulting from it respond to social issues such as wars and quasiwars, conflict and quasi-conflict, regional and global, left and right, poverty and disease, economy and crisis, along with the hurt, uneasiness, anxiety, pain and turbulence caused. As Hill says, ‘Indeed, ink is now no longer a medium but an important and complex discourse in art stemming from the expansion of its creative potential, spilling out into film, animation, performance, multi-media and installation.’

Calvin Hui, Co-founder and Artistic Director of 3812 Gallery states, ‘The use of lines is one of the major characteristics of traditional Chinese paintings. Wang Huangsheng, born into a family in which his father was a painter and calligrapher of the Literati movement, has received formal training in Chinese painting. He re-interprets lines in a contemporary way, developing an abstract yet strong style with a foothold in tradition. Wang bridges “cultivation” in Chinese traditions and “freedom” in contemporary culture, perfectly in line with 3812’s core values.’

Hui continues: ‘Through this exhibition, we hope to bring audiences into Wang’s art world full of fluid and unrestrained lines.’

Organiser / Presenter 3812 Gallery
Curator:Katie Hill
Artist:Wang Huangsheng

Note:This event record is compiled from "Hong Kong Visual Arts Yearbook 2019" published by Department of Fine Arts, The Chinese University of Hong Kong.

Info

Indoor / Outdoor

Indoor

Local / Non-local Production

Local

error: Content is protected !!