Gu Dexin: The Important Thing is Not the Meat

Gu Dexin: The Important Thing is Not the Meat

UCCA, Beijing

March 21, 2012

Gu Dexin
The Important Thing is Not the Meat

25 March–27 May 2012

UCCA
798 Art District, No. 4 Jiuxianqiao Lu
Beijing

www.ucca.org.cn

The Ullens Center for Contemporary Art is honored to present a major retrospective of work by Gu Dexin (b. 1962, Beijing) spanning three decades of this artist’s vast and varied output. Entitled “Gu Dexin: The Important Thing is Not the Meat,” it marks the first comprehensive attempt to showcase and elucidate one of China’s most complex and original artistic voices.

An outsider with no formal training, Gu Dexin first came to prominence on the Beijing art scene with a 1986 solo exhibition at the International House of paintings and works on paper that spanned various styles. In 1989, he was among three Chinese artists included in the epochal exhibition “Magiciens de la Terre” at the Centre Pompidou, in what was arguably the first international display of contemporary art from China. Throughout the 1990s and into the 2000s, he responded to invitations to participate in a long wave of “China shows” with installations of fruit, meat, and plastic that consciously refused to engage with the symbolic legacies of High Socialism. Gu so disliked the idea of imposing a given reading on his viewers that he titled his works first with serial numbers, and later simply with the date on which they were completed.

“Gu Dexin: The Important Thing is Not the Meat” traces the full arc of Gu’s solo career, from his amateur paintings in the late 1970s through his climactic final piece of 2009, bringing together more than 100 works. In doing so, it presents Gu’s work as an alternative history of the development of contemporary art in China: his early paintings cycle readily among the Western styles then being digested, just as his later performative installations foreshadowed larger debates over acceptable forms and materials both inside the Chinese art world and in the nascent international interpretive community around it.

Elements and sequences that appear in his earliest work recur throughout his oeuvre—apples and sides of meat first depicted in paintings resurface later as real objects in installations; the fantastical humanoid figure world of his earliest watercolors, pen drawings, and embroideries forms the basis not only for later sculptures but for the flash animations that became part of the artist’s daily practice starting in the late 1990s. His ultimate decision to end his career and return to “normal” life in the same Beijing residential compound where he grew up and made nearly all of the work on view has been read by many commentators less as a rejection of art than a protest to society.

The exhibition takes its title from a 2003 article by the artist and critic Qiu Zhijie, the title of which was itself a response to the 1996 article “The Important Thing is Not the Art” by the curator Li Xianting. In this article, Li wrote on behalf of a then-marginalized group of painters and sculptors (including Gu) whose significance he saw in terms as much social as aesthetic. Qiu wrote in defense of his own later generation, the “Post-Sense Sensibility” artists, a group which provoked public ire and official censure with their gory experiments involving animal and even human flesh around the turn of the 21st century. This title, like this exhibition, positions Gu as the missing link between these two generations and their respective concerns.

Since Gu left art for good in 2009, this exhibition has been assembled entirely by loans from private collections in China, Europe, and the United States. Curated by UCCA Director Philip Tinari, it draws on the collection of the Guy and Myriam Ullens Foundation (Geneva), with other lenders including the DSL Collection, Guan Yi Collection, Tim & Ellen Kim Van Housen Collection, Xin Dong Cheng, Weng Ling, Shanghai Gallery of Art, and Galleria Continua. This is the second time Gu’s work has been featured at UCCA, the first being the center’s inaugural 2007 exhibition “’85 New Wave: The Birth of Chinese Contemporary Art.”

The exhibition will be accompanied by a major monograph to be published by UCCA Books and launched in early summer 2012. This book will include the proceedings of a conference that takes place at UCCA on April 8.

Editorial contact:
Sybella Chow, UCCA, sybella.chow@ucca.org.cn
Tamsin Selby, Sutton PR Asia, Tamsin [​at​] suttonprasia.com

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