Dr. Uli Sigg and wife Rita Sigg |
At an event previewing the M+ Sigg Collection Exhibition, I was able to speak with Dr. Uli Sigg in private. The visionary collector recalled how the glove painting by Zhang Peili became one of his favourite first collected works of Chinese contemporary art in the 1990s.
Zhang Peili
X? Series No. 4, 1987
Oil on canvas
|
“I started to buy back paintings in the 89 China Avant-garde Exhibition from
Wang Luyan, a participating artist in the show. Wang recognized that it was going to be a historic exhibition and convinced fellow artists to keep their works.
However, many of them were living poor and couldn’t afford to wait. So Wang
bought some of their works and I bought them from him.” Of course in hindsight,
Wang was right in his decision and so was the benevolent former Swiss
ambassador (1995–1998) who first came to China as a businessman in 1979.
Since then, Dr Uli Sigg has been
building his Chinese art collection by using the methodology of an institution
rather than based on personal taste. He also bought back earlier works of the avant-garde
artists, many of whom were also members of some self-organized art collectives
spurred by western ideology and global art concepts. As such, his collection
becomes a survey that spans 40 years of Chinese contemporary art history,
beginning from the late Cultural Revolution in the 70s, through the 85 New Wave
Movement, the 89 Exhibition, underground art in the 90s and works up to the
present day.
It is easy to relate the artists’
performances and installations in the 89 Exhibition held in Beijing's National
Art Gallery as a protest against a general lack of artistic freedom in
society. What makes the 89 Exhibition more historic and political is that
it was held just four months before the June 4 crackdown in Tiananmen Square.
Growing signs of agitation and aspirations to modernize among artists and
intellectuals meant the two events looked like a continuous movement.
“Condoms, Eggs and Gunshots” – the
sensational headline given to depict the exhibition by Time magazine, March 1989, aptly describes some of the ludicrous
performances such as throwing condoms, hatching eggs, washing feet and selling
shrimps. The most notable act, which led to the abrupt closure of the show, was
the firing of two gunshots at a phone-booth installation by Xiao Lu, a female
artist from Zhejiang who later admitted that she just wanted to be
noticed.
Geng Jianyi
The Second Situation,1987
Oil on canvas
170 X 130 cm
|
Back to the M+ Sigg Collection
Exhibition, among the 80 selected art pieces on first public display in Hong
Kong, the picks from the 89 Exhibition particularly grasp my interest.
There are no more condoms and eggs, but the realist style paintings
display vigorous creative impetus and conceptual thinking. Zhang
Peili’s monochrome glove painting, aka X? Series No. 4 (1987), purposefully
defies meaning in the subject matter in a bid to criticize the use of art to
achieve political purpose. Geng Jianyi, co-founder of Pond Society with Zhang,
sought to explore his own emotions and identity by breaking down the act of laughing
into four stages with The Second Situation (1987).
Right: Wang Guangyi
Mao Zedong: Red Grid No. 2, 1988
Oil on canvas
147 x 117 cm
Left: Wang Guangyi
Death of Marat, 1986
Oil on canvas
154 x 203.5 cm
|
Huang Yongping
Six Small Turntables, 1988
Leather bag, ink on wood,
black-and-white photographic print
57 x 44 x 77 cm
|
Wang Guangyi, who later embraces Political Pop, learns to appropriate the portrait of Mao with a schema of grid design. Whether Mao Zedong: Red Grid No.2 (1988) intends to be an artistic experiment or to ridicule idol admiration is still open to interpretation. Huang Yongping’s gadget-filled suitcase entitled Six Small Turntables (1988), designed to leave the component of painting to chance, symbolizes the adoption of an unprecedented conceptual approach to art. The influence of Marcel Duchamp on the Chinese artists perhaps could best be epitomized in Shi Xinning’s use of parody manifested in Duchamp Retrospective Exhibition in China (2000–2001), in which Chairman Mao is seen inspecting and approving Duchamp’s urinal in high spirit.
Shi Xinning
Duchamp Retrospective Exhibition in
China, 2000–2001
Oil on canvas
100 x 100 cm
|
No more condoms and eggs, but are
there gunshots? We do hear some vague echoes. Among works after the
millennium, Wang Xingwei’s super-realistic painting New Beijing (2001)
seizes a frantic moment in Tiananmen Square during June 4 1989 where a
bicyclist is seen rushing the wounded to hospital. Appropriating a photograph
of the incident, the artist has made a surrealistic switch by drawing two
bleeding penguins to replace the wounded students, reflecting soberness when
the whole country was ecstatic about their new global power status after being
accepted as organizer of the Beijing Olympics.
Wang Xingwei
Now Beijing, 2001
Oil on canvas
200 X 300 cm
|
Liu Heungshing
1989 Beijing, Sent Wounded Students
on Tiananmen Square to Hospital, 1989
Archival inkjet print
58.5 X 90 cm
|
Zeng Fanzhi
Rainbow, 1997
Oil on canvas
179.5 x 198.5 cm
|
Left: Fang Lijun
Untitled, 1995
Oil on canvas
250 x 180 cm
Right: Zhang Xiaogang
Bloodline Series - Big Family No.17, 1998
Oil on canvas
149 x 180.5 cm |
Ai Weiwei
Still Life, 1995
Stone |
There is no shortage of works by Cynical Realism artists such as Fang Lijun, Zeng Fanzhi, Yue Minjun, as well as photographic and video documentation of body performance by Zhang Huan and Song Dong. Ai Weiwei's antique stone installation is also conspicuously on view. Now that most of the underground artists of the 80s and 90s have become mainstream and globally famous, my attention is shifted to those courageous and tenacious earlier works that are less known to the public.
Left: Zhang Wei
Fusuijing Building,1975
Oil on paper
26 X 19 cm
Right: Zheng Ziyan
Small Oil Paint Box, 1970
Wood
28 X 21 X 3.5cm
|
Both Zheng Ziyan’s Small
Oil Paint Box (1970) and Zheng Wai's Suijing Building (1975)
illustrate the artists' effort to retain their individualistic perception in an
era dominated by propaganda and political portraiture. Perhaps the most
enticing works is EXPE 10 (1981) also by Zheng. It is a
composite of Jackson Pollock’s drip painting on the front and Picasso’s
modernist style at the back, revealing the interesting phenomenon that the two
artistic movements were concurrently influencing the artist.
Also, as seen in the photographic documentation by Wang Peng, 84 Ink-5, it is revealed that as early as 1984 nude body performance had already emerged. The high school student who had just turned 19, covered his nude body with ink to make imprints on Chinese xuan paper, probably had Yves Klein's anthropometry performance in mind.
Zhang Wei
Expe10, 1981
Oil on canvas
109 x 82 x 5 cm
|
Also, as seen in the photographic documentation by Wang Peng, 84 Ink-5, it is revealed that as early as 1984 nude body performance had already emerged. The high school student who had just turned 19, covered his nude body with ink to make imprints on Chinese xuan paper, probably had Yves Klein's anthropometry performance in mind.
Wang Peng
84 ink -5, 1984
Ink on paper
68 x 106 cm
|
“We have recorded a satisfactory
700 turn-out per day.” According to Pi Li, Sigg Senior Curator,
Visual Culture of M+ who came from Beijing three years ago to take up the role,
he is expecting an attendance of up to 30,000 at the end of the show. “This
indicates a great public enthusiasm to know more about Chinese contemporary art
in Hong Kong.”
Four years ago in 2012, Dr Uli
Sigg reached a donation-purchase agreement with Hong Kong M+ and decided to pass
a large portion of his Chinese contemporary art collection to M+, Hong Kong’s
new museum of visual culture, a core unit in the WKCDA art project which amounts
to an expenditure of up to HKD47 billion (USD7.77 billion). Today the Herzog
& de Meuron designed building is still under construction and only due to
open in late 2019. Indeed, many critical eyes have been laid on the first
exhibition of the M+ Sigg Collection, assessing its relationship with the local
art scene and whether the large amount spent will increase the profile of art and culture.
Dr Uli Sigg was deeply moved by
two Chinese ladies who burst into tears during the "Mahjong"
Exhibition in 2005, a seminal show in Kunstmuseum Bern featuring his
Chinese art collection. "They never knew what was happening in China back
then.” He certainly deserves our admiration in helping to preserve an
invaluable part of Chinese art, not to mention that his financial boost to
artists was critical and timely.
Zhang Huan
To Add One Meter to an Anonymous
Mountain, 1995
Chromogenic colour print
62.2 x 103.3 cm
|
Song Dong
Lower: Breathing, Tiananmen Square, 1996
Colour photographic print 120 x 180
cm
Upper: Breathing, Houhai (Back Sea), 1996
Colour photographic print 120 x 180
cm
|
Ask most of the Hong Kong viewers, it may be hard to empathize like those two ladies. But in time, that sense of identification as Chinese might need to be nurtured and this is done best through art. The exhibition at least prompts us to look back on history. Those moments showing how individual Chinese artists resisted government pressure through their courageous art practices, and how they capitalize on the transformation of society might shed some light on our local artists too. There is definitely many a canvas to be drawn and many more performances to be played.
Note: "The M+ Sigg Collection
Exhibition: Fours decades of Chinese contemporary art" (5 February to 5
April 2016), has previously been shown at Bildmuseet in Sweden in 2004 and at
the Whitworth Art Gallery in Manchester, UK in 2015. The show will be touring other Asian cities in the near future.
Posted on HongKongfp.com
Posted on HongKongfp.com
No comments:
Post a Comment