House of Oracles: A Huang Yong Ping Retrospective

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This exhibition presents the first retrospective of the work of this contemporary Chinese artist. Working with diverse traditions and media, Huang Yong Ping has created an artistic universe comprised of provocative installations that challenge the viewer to reconsider everything from the idea of art, to national identity, to recent history. Once one of the leading figures of the Xiamen Dada movement--a collective of artists interested in creating a new Chinese cultural identity by bridging trends in Western modernism with Chinese traditions of Zen and Taoism--Huang continues to confront established definitions of history and aesthetics.
Huang's sculptures and installations--drawing on the legacies of Joseph Beuys, Arte Povera, and John Cage as well as traditional Chinese art and philosophy--routinely juxtapose traditional objects or iconic images with modern references. Eight-Legged Hat (2000) pairs ancient Egyptian ibis with a pith helmet, reflecting Egypt's colonial past. Other works resonate with more recent events: Bat Project II (2002) is a replica of the wing from the U.S. spy plane that collided with a Chinese fighter jet in 2001, setting off a weeklong international standoff. Two Typhoons (2001) consists of the prayer scrolls from a dismantled Tibetan prayer wheel, echoing the continuing conflict between Communist China and Buddhist Tibet.
The exhibition will be accompanied by a major publication, the first to address the full range of Huang Yong Ping's artistic accomplishments. . . .
Huang's sculptures and installations--drawing on the legacies of Joseph Beuys, Arte Povera, and John Cage as well as traditional Chinese art and philosophy--routinely juxtapose traditional objects or iconic images with modern references. Eight-Legged Hat (2000) pairs ancient Egyptian ibis with a pith helmet, reflecting Egypt's colonial past. Other works resonate with more recent events: Bat Project II (2002) is a replica of the wing from the U.S. spy plane that collided with a Chinese fighter jet in 2001, setting off a weeklong international standoff. Two Typhoons (2001) consists of the prayer scrolls from a dismantled Tibetan prayer wheel, echoing the continuing conflict between Communist China and Buddhist Tibet.
The exhibition will be accompanied by a major publication, the first to address the full range of Huang Yong Ping's artistic accomplishments. . . .
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Exhibition Web Site
http://visualarts.walkerart.org/oracles/
Featuring work in the exhibition, the Web site includes related blog entries, exhibition catalogue essays, writings by Huang Yong Ping, and a lexicon of important concepts and motifs in the artist's work.


Exhibition Catalogue
http://shop.walkerart.org/?ck=PAYWKGHUVD&pk=5ACB1F23AD&SectionID=1011&CatalogID=233§ion=Product&Details=5775335
The fully-illustrated volume sheds light on Huang's unique and provocative visual language and philosophy through translations of a number of his writings as well as essays by Fei Dawei, Hou Hanru, and Philippe Verge and a lexicon to the epistemology of his art and thought by Doryun Chong.


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