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Wang Shuye: Experiments with Naked Views of Space-time 2010
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Written by KALONSNET Editor   
Published: November 15 2010

(2010); 193.9x130.3cm, oil on canvas, courtesy of the artist and Tokyo Gallery + BTAP, copyright © Wang Shuye

Tokyo Gallery + BTAP is pleased to present a solo exhibition by Wang Shuye entitled “Experiments with Naked Views of Space-time 2010”. This is the artist’s first one-man show at the gallery, showcasing a selection of 17 new paintings made using various types of oil paint ranging from S10 to F120.

Wang Shuye was born in China’s Heilongjiang province in 1963, and graduated from Beijing’s Central Academy of Craft Art (now renamed the Academy of Arts & Design of Tsinghua University) in 1989. That same year, his graduation work won the Gold National Award for Excellence, the highest honor awarded by the Ministry for Trade, Education and Industry. In 1990, Wang came to Japan and spent the next ten years devoting himself exclusively to the spiritual pursuit of art, exhibiting no work until his 2001 solo show in Kamakura. Since then he has been showing his paintings mainly in Tokyo and Kamakura, in addition to holding a retrospective exhibition at the Ikeda Museum of 20th Century Art in 2009 entitled “The Affirmative Vision – The World of Wang Shuye”. Today, Wang continues to live and work in Kamakura, producing paintings that are informed by a tenacious and persistent spirit of inquiry.

Wang’s paintings, often covered by a mass of countless brushstrokes, use this layered technique to depict profound scenes of tranquil beauty. These visual spaces represent a world that exists prior to becoming a subject of our awareness. Standing in front of these large canvases, the viewer is freed from the constraints of the present moment and discovers the existence of another, more mercurial space and time. Although he used to work mainly with Chinese ink and pencil, Wang began using oil paint in 2007 in order to explore new directions in his artistic practice. By giving up his reliance on outlines and contours, Wang has enabled his vision to draw ever closer to his chosen subjects – so much so that he seems to approach the very essence of their materiality.

At a time when contemporary visual culture is witnessing a diversification of its forms, Wang draws inspiration from theories of phenomenological reduction and the wisdom derived from a holistic understanding of existence found in Buddhist thought, attempting to break away from epistemological and semantic worldviews. Often played out on large, sprawling canvases, Wang’s paintings render their own visual images impossible to objectify. His works take the two-dimensional realms before our eyes and transform them into a transcendental visual space with poetic and spiritual dimensions.

We hope you take this opportunity to experience the thrilling new artistic possibilities presented by Wang’s “naked views of space-time”.

* The text provided by Tokyo Gallery + BTAP.


Opened dates: November 4 - 24, 2010

Last Updated on November 04 2010
 

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