Famous wheelchair-bound British physicist and mathematician Stephen
Hawking is balanced dangerously on a cliff-edge. Despite his
"super-human" intellect, this precarious positioning underpins his
physical frailty.
Made in fibreglass, resin and paint, the sculpture titled
Ubermench is one of 25 pieces on show at the ongoing exhibition
After the Shock, now on in Capital Museum. It features paintings,
photography, video and installation works by "Young British
Artists" (YBA), who came into prominence in the 1990s for their
introspective examination of life, death, morbidity, sex and
delinquency.
The group caught the public eye at the 1997 exhibition
Sensation, held at the Royal Academy of Arts in London. Among the
exhibits were animals sliced up and placed in beautiful
formaldehyde-filled boxes, a cow's rotting head being fed to flies
and maggots, and a female artist's embroidered names of all the
people she had slept with on the inside of a tent, an
autobiographical metaphor of her body.
The artists rapidly became famous in arguments engaging both
ordinary viewers and critics on "what is art?" And the YBA
phenomenon promoted the renaissance of British art in the 1990s,
exerting an influence on artists worldwide, including China.
"China's artists learnt about YBAs' works by word of mouth,
public praise and a few catalogues older artists occasionally
brought back from their travels," said Pi Li, one of the show's
three curators. "Sometimes they had to guess at the meanings from a
few square-centimeter images, but it was in this guessing that
China's modern art found its path."
The showpieces include 12 of the works by YBAs, among them now
very famous names in the West, such as Damien Hirst, Tracey Emin
and Douglas Gordon.
In an installation titled Croque Mort, which refers to the
person who as a legend has it would bite the feet of the recently
deceased to check if they were really dead.
In a series of seven pictures, the artist Douglas Gordon
photographed his own new born baby biting her feet, and put the
photos in a red room covered in a red carpet. With a sinister title
and the close-up of a baby biting her own feet to check her
physical existence in a womb-like room, Gordon was reminding
viewers of their physical mortality.
In 1994, controversial artist Tracey Emin undertook a journey
across the United States, recording and reading for her
autobiography. It was also a trip of self-discovery and analysis,
in which Emin undertook a healing ritual by recounting painful
personal memories including being raped, abortion, drunkenness,
sexual intimidation and violence. Then, on a chair, the artist
embroidered significant personal anecdotes and sewed on the names
of all the places she had visited. The chair is exhibited as an
artwork named There Is a Lot of Money in Chair.
Other highlights include Turner Prize laureate Damien Hirst's
Girls, who like boys, who like boys, who like girls, who like
girls, like girls, like boys. The title is an adaptation of lyrics
from a pop British band Blur's Boys and Girls.
The exhibit comprises two round big plates, one pink and the
other blue, on which the paint surface is encrusted with colored
butterflies, and disquieting devices such as razors. From a
distance, viewers will see only stunning butterflies in lovely
colored plates, but a careful observation will lead them to
discover the razors, reminding people of the danger lurking behind
seduction and the impermanence of material beauty.
Some of Hirst's best known works, like Away from the Flock which
features a lamb preserved in formaldehyde and Tracey Emin's highly
controversial My Bed, an installation famous for the bizarre
combination of dotted bed sheets, the artist's underwear and
condoms, are not included in the show, said Pi Li, citing problems
with transportation.
Although many of the most-shocking pieces of the artists are not
being shown this time, many see it as a refreshing start by the
Capital Museum, set up in 1981, to have a show themed on modern
art. In past decades, the museum has been best known for its
exhibitions featuring classic Chinese and international artworks
and relics.
"Our slogan is 'The Capital Museum, My Own Museum.' So we
welcome all kinds of excellent shows from various time periods and
styles," said Yao An, the museum's vice-director.
Modern art is usually considered hard to understand, but the
show's initiators do not see the making of a connection with
viewers as a problem, placing their faith in the audience's growing
taste and the exhibits' charm.
Guo Xiaoyan, organizer of the Guangzhou Triennial, was also
involved in selecting the showpieces and held an exhibition of them
in Guangzhou last year. According to her, it was the most popular
exhibition at the Guangzhou Museum of Art in 2006. "I think the
pieces relate to the lives of the viewers, on the basic aspects of
life, death and sex," she said.
Guo recalled that even some elderly viewers appreciated the
works and had their own interpretations, some of which were really
stunning and fresh. "They are much more sharp in appreciating
modern art than we imagine."
The exhibition will end on May 11. The museum will provide both
Chinese and and English-speaking guides.
(China Daily March 22, 2007)