Beijing Contemporary Art Expo 2019 : Leo Gallery | Booth: V28

National Agricultural Exhibition Center, 29 - 31 August 2019 
Booth:V28

2019 Beijing Contemporary Art Expo
Booth: V28
Duration: 2019.8.29-8.31
Artists:
Cai Dongdong, Dai Yun, Fung Lik-yan Kevin, Ji Wenyu & Zhu Weibing, Li Yiwen, Liu Zhengyong, Max Huckle, Mou Huan, Wu Ding, Wu Houting, Shiau Jon Jen, Yan Bo, T?ru Harada, Yuan Keru
Venue: National Agricultural Exhibition Center
No.16, Dongsanhuan North Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing, China

Schedule:
VIP Preview
8月29日 13:00-20:00
8月30日 11:00-13:00
Public Days
8月30日13:00-20:00
8月31日11:00-18:00

 

Leo Gallery is delighted to participate in this year’s Beijing Contemporary with works of artists Cai Dongdong, Dai Yun, Kevin Fung Lik-yan, Ji Wenyu & Zhu Weibing, Li Yiwen, Liu Zhengyong, Max Huckle, Mou Huan, Wu Ding, Wu Houting, Shiau Jon Jen, Yan Bo, T?ru Harada, and Yuan Keru.
  
Cai Dongdong (born in 1978, graduated from the Beijing Film Academy) whose works are different from the general image production, which aim to de-construct and re-construct the operational mechanism of the medium of photography. He quits being an image producer and stands on the side of the viewer, reflects on the complexity and absurdity of image viewing, and starts working with images that already exist in reality.
  
Kevin Fung Lik-yan (born in 1964) has decided to devote fully to his art after spending years in his trained profession of engineering. He obtained the Diploma of Contemporary Sculpture from University of Hong Kong, followed by his studies with the renowned sculptor Tong King Sum. In recent years, his creation has been gradually expanded from woodcarving to diverse materials. His works focus on the living condition of the urban middle class, and the challenges and pressure they face. Encountered with the rapid development of modern cities, the artist tries to find the core values of life in between.
  
Ji Wenyu (born in 1959) & Zhu Weibing (born in 1971) as the former turned from painting to soft sculpture creation, he found the challenge and breakthrough for himself in the use of “cloth”. In the soft sculpture work he collaborates with his wife Zhu Weibing in which cloth is used as the main material, crowds of “humanoid puppet” create daily dramatic scenes, through which the faces of modern society are vividly reflected.
  
Li Yiwen (born in 1982, graduated from Central Academy of Fine Arts) whose pursuit of aesthetic taste is closely related with his personal artistic experience. He casts his keen perception of art on his reading interest in art theory, engraving, physics and philosophy, yet he has the characteristics of the new generation of Chinese artists in the Internet era. Li Yiwen’s creation in recent years focuses on presenting “time” through painting. He extracted it as “the third kind of time”, which is the time about perception, in which memory, intuition, experience and feeling interinfiltrated and coagulated in his paintings.
  
Liu Zhengyong (born in 1980, graduated from Tianjin Academy of Fine Arts) whose paintings use the body as a clue to explore the human memory and history from an individual perspective. His paintings are full of primitive power, eulogizing the body's instinct and highlighting the perception of the body through the thickness and power of the expressive colours, in which the connections between light and darkness, consciousness and body, emotion and energy are created.
  
Max Huckle (born in 1987, graduated from the State Academy of Fine Arts Karlsruhe, Germany) creates works led by an instinctive and intuitive perception, breaking the contemporary cognition of art which is highly confined to academia, pursuing freedom with contemporary techniques. He has always been pursuing a line that would stop the world. The way he paints is the same as what people sees in his paintings, rapid and energetic, with the momentum of an avalanche on the whole. However, there is always such a line, a pen or a gesture in between that makes time stop all of a sudden.
  
Mou Huan (born in 1959, graduated from Sichuan Academy of Fine Arts and Dusseldorf Art Academy, Germany) studied with Joerg Immendorff, the world-renowned neo-expressionist art master. Treading between the Chinese and the Western cultures, he has been influenced by the profound heritage in Chinese art as well as German neo-expressionism. With both influence expressed in his painting, his works are characterized by grand narrative, existence and nihility, and poetic temperament in the deep.
  
Wu Ding (born in 1982, graduated from the Fine Arts College of Shanghai Normal University and the China Academy of Art) whose photographic works continuously pay attention to the “intrinsic order” in time and space. With both rationality and sensibility, his work has an art aesthetics of pureness and restraint.
  
Wu Houting (born in 1985) has been recently exploring the relationship among matters. Not simply recreating parallel space, he creates his works with meticulous design, integration and reconstruction, polish and moulding. Therefore, the final installation works he presented are the reconstructed and unpredictable spatial entities.
  
Shiau Jon Jen (born in 1954 graduated from Département arts plastiques, Université de Paris VIII) has studied from the modern art sculptor Ju Ming. Using camphorwood as the medium, his works evolved from the initial concern of nature, then developed to the use of landscape as a metaphor of emotion like the mental state of Chinese literati, during which process he poured the humanity in the creation of the abstract woodcarving.
  
Yan Bo (born in 1970, graduated from Tianjin Academy of Fine Arts and Central Academy of Fine Arts) whose works set a speculation for the “special objects” in the mixed area of paintings and objects. Within the “special objects”, the works are openly formed in irregular shape and full of exquisite texture and charms of trace, and reveal the spirit of tangibility and freedom.
  
Tøru Harada(born in 1980, Japan, graduated from the Art Department of Kyushu Sangyo University) has the free and bald creating style. He is good at discovering the mediums and inspirations of creation from the street. With the stylized use of living materials, minimal structure and thick lines, he works are infused with fun.
  
In "STORY", the special curatorial unit in this year’s Beijing Contemporary, Leo Gallery artist Yuan Keru (born in 1990,graduated from China Academy of Art) joined in with her work Fleeting Strangers, a four-screen installation. Her work is formed of four stories crossing the fractured time streams and spatial dimensions. With the internal complex logical relationship, the emotional connection, the revelation and the ending, her work shows the speculation of the young generation of young Chinese artists.
  
Meanwhile, in the public art unit “WONDER” in this year’s Beijing Contemporary, the work “Sofa” created by Leo Gallery artist Dai Yun (born in 1971, graduated from Middle School of Xi'an Academy of Fine Arts) is a special artistic interpretation of public art. Through removing the externalized visual elements and thus making the essential structure of the building exposed before people, the artist makes it the main body of the sculpture. With the strong contrast of the bony material and the physical beauty it creates, the work brings out the fantastic synaesthesia and artistic language.