The Exhibition of Annual of Contemporary Art of China

798 Art Center, Beijing

December 20, 2022 to February 5, 2023

Exhibition reviews the highlights of contemporary Chinese art over the past few years.


 

Li Qing,Neighbor's Window·Decorated Eggs

antique wooden window, oil paint, plexiglass 157 x 92 x 10 cm 2021

 

 

Li Qing,Spot The Difference •Rear Windows(There are 6 differences in the two paintings)

Oil on Canvas 160 x 120 cm x 2 2019-2020

 

 

Exhibition view of The Exhibition of Annual of Contemporary Art of China,798 Art Center, Beijing

 

 

Exhibition view of The Exhibition of Annual of Contemporary Art of China,798 Art Center, Beijing

 

 

Exhibition reviews the highlights of contemporary Chinese art over the past few years.

 

Though contemporary artists in China have been confronted with lots of challenges and difficulties caused by the pandemic over the past few years, they have still kept active and productive. A show based on 2,891 art exhibitions held in 2021 offers a comprehensive overview of the recent development and condition of contemporary art in China.

 

The show, The Exhibition of Annual of Contemporary Art of China 2021, is held at Beijing's 798 Art Center and Shanghai's Duolun Museum of Modern Art. Works by 26 established artists are on display in Beijing while those of 12 artists, many of whom are young, are exhibited in Shanghai.

 

Zhu Qingsheng, curator of the exhibition, says that it's "a dynamic demonstration" of the book Annual of Contemporary Art of China 2021 published last year by the Chinese Modern Art Archive of Peking University, an art institution that has recorded the progress and development of Chinese contemporary art since 1986. Since 2015, an exhibition based on the book has been held annually.

 

"Contemporary art is about critical thinking and a reflection of society. Contemporary artists try to find solutions to problems facing us. The show is an exploration of that," says Zhu, who is also chairman of the International Association of Art History.

 

The show covers 12 key themes, and top of that list is art and technology.

 

According to the Annual of Contemporary Art of China 2021, The hottest topic in 2021 was non-fungible tokens, digital assets, including images and video clips, which are represented by unique codes and secured using blockchain technology. The technology can track the ownership and validity of each NFT when it is bought or sold.

 

In 2021, when digital artist Mike Winkelmann, known as Beeple, took the art world by storm after his NFT, titled Everydays: The First 5,000 Days, sold for more than $69 million at an auction at Christie's, Chinese artists warmly embraced the new art form. Shows and sessions based on NFT-related topics were thus widely organized. Several digital art auctions were also held in Beijing and Shanghai.

 

Apart from blockchain, artificial intelligence, biological science, materials science and other cutting-edge technologies are employed by artists to create artworks, writes the Annual.

 

Zhu, the curator, says that one of the latest developments in contemporary art is its active combination with technology. Science's characteristics of change and innovation are converging with art.

 

"In fact, contemporary art has always been a lab of creativity," he says.

 

The Annual notes that artists should remain wary of advanced technology when actively embracing these new sciences. Many works on display reflect the artists' feeling surrounding such issues.

 

A total of 111 representative artists were included in the name list of the Annual. They were selected through extensive surveys, research of 3,850 documentary sources, and analysis of related data. Almost all of them held shows at art museums in 2021.

 

Among the names, there are established artists who gained fame during the last century, such as Cai Guoqiang, Liu Xiaodong and Fang Lijun. Many young artists, born in the 1980s and 1990s, are also included in the list.

 

"China has experienced great changes in the past four decades. The younger generation is very different from that of their parents. Such differences are distinctive in their artworks," says Zhu, adding that the show reflects an intergenerational shift in the exploration of Chinese art in 2021.

 

The past few years have seen more and more young artists in their 20s and 30s emerging. They are active across online platforms, which show their works and are supported by galleries, art museums and art institutions, enabling them to be exposed to a wider audience.

 

Zhu says that artistic concepts of Chinese artists are fully in line with their global counterparts. The younger generation is facing a world that brings more challenges and opportunities, as contemporary Chinese art is gradually integrated into that of the world at large.

 

Due to the pandemic, the show was postponed several times and finally opened to the public earlier last month. It will later move to Xiamen, Fujian province.

 

 


 

 

 

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