Tang Contemporary Art is honored to announce Painting Sociology, a solo exhibition by renowned artist Zhu Jinshi, opening on April 29th, 2023. The exhibition will focus on the artist’s abstract paintings, including his expanding “thick painting” series, while also adding acrylic-based “thick painting” works and small-scale oil paintings, presenting more than 30 pieces in total.
Since the times of Max Weber, sociology has been centered around the research themes of politics, economics, ideology, power and regulations. This includes the theories of Marx before him, and the post-modern philosophical discourse after him. Harrington states, “Art is inclined towards the scientific image which overturns the world, whereas sociology dedicates itself to dispelling the intoxicating mysteries within social life; art opposes the interpretation of life through materialism, while the primary interest of sociology is to unveil how seemingly unique objects are in fact constructed and reproduced by society.” Aesthetic sociology performs interactive research on the juxtaposing studies of art and sociology. Instead of analyzing society through painting, it can become the direct investigative objective of sociology. This is also the migration of Becker’s social imagery into the art realm, which demonstrated the understanding of aesthetic sociology through the theory of symbolic interactions. We are able to then hypothesize that it is viable to seek a theoretical discourse to Chinese contemporary art through the observation of different phenomena demonstrated by painting on the art market; or, we can also use such an observation to build up an art historical narrative. This form of conjecture wields a directive: the contemporaneity of painting. Since the essence of life is to create new organisms through existing conditions, materials, forces and opportunities, we will also have to understand the existing conditions that cause the artists’ intuitive creative processes before attempting to uncover the potential fate of Chinese contemporary art. Zhu Jinshi said, “To this day, contemporary Chinese painting is but the product of the market. Not only do we view it as such, the West too doubles down on this notion. Therefore, unlike the West which generates many a show with global influence, we do not boast any. This is not because of issues with our paintings, but because of a lack of trustworthy theory. This is exactly the viewpoint that aesthetic sociology attempts to express.”
It is then apparent that Zhu Jinshi is anything but a simple painter, he mostly thinks about “the history of easel painting”. As a conceptual artist who investigates the form and structure of painting, this is a mental attitude, a idealistic operation. We can subsequently hold a better understanding of his works. As one of China’s earliest practitioners of abstract painting and installation art, his “thick painting” style stood out in 2000, and Shi Tao Quotes is a classic at the time. “Thick painting” reached its height during the 2010s: many works from this period were presented here, such as Volcanic Rocks (2010), Wind from Western Suburbs and Express A View No.1(2013). The triptych work Lost Clouds represents the artist’s polyptypch style beginning in the 1980s. Miserable June No.1 and A Promise Near the Mountain No.2 are both works from 2017 that metaphorically depict the historic circumstances of both society and the self. Valley in the Mirror, Did not Burn the Linked Camp and Sadness Floats over the Pond are works completed after the pandemic, provoking the imagery of a new world. “Thick paintings” after 2020 connect with reality and promise an inescapable entanglement between painting and sociology. In short, painting sociology differs from that of installations: the times of Duchamp and Beuys have passed, while the advantages of contemporary painting—passion, meditation, obsession, conflict, sadness, loss, pain and happiness—have shaped society into becoming more sentimental, spontaneous and coincidental. Zhu Jinshi uses the techniques of “piling”, “stirring” and “lifting” to achieve thickness, aggressiveness and three-dimensionality. The pigment’s materiality is thus accentuated. Overwhelming aesthetics and tridimensional viewpoints revolutionized the compounded bearings between oil color and the canvas, while the interactivity among medium, volume, time and space formulated the work’s immense receptivity.
During the past two years, Zhu Jinshi also introduced the new acrylic medium. This is not only a challenge to the self based on past painting practices, but also an extension of perceptions. The artist used undiluted acrylic paint to cover the canvas directly, presenting an industrial peculiarity diverging from oil painting. A more emanative spatial structure is formed through over-saturated hues, flowing paint and multilayered density. The small-scale “thick painting” works, on the other hand, are the results of the artist’s many studies used to strengthen his systematic methodology. He is able to strategize on these remarkably limited spaces, transforming them into exceptional compositions that compete with one another under a new light.
The paintings of Zhu Jinshi begin in theory, then utilize both form and structure to illustrate the philosophy of pigmentary narrative. This trail of practices showcases the path of discovery tread by abstract artists from his generation. Till this day, he still deliberates on the contemporaneity of painting, opening up a prelude to the discussions on painting sociology followed by a brand new wave of self-introspection.
Zhang Fei Lost his HorseOil on canvas 200 x 200 cm 2023 | Scratch AgainOil on canvas 35 x 40 cm 2022 | Vertical Rainbow No.2Oil on canvas 180 x 480 cm (3 pieces) 2019 |
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Xiao Qiao and KongmingOil on canvas 200 x 200 cm 2023 | See the Rainbow AgainOil on canvas 180 x 320 cm (2 pieces) 2018 | Viewing Bamboo on the BalconyOil on canvas 35 x 40 cm 2022 |
Fragrant Hill No.4Oil on canvas 140 x 160 cm 2022 | Monk Shi TaoOil on canvas 180 x 160 cm 2018 | Fragrant Hill No.3Oil on canvas 160 x 140 cm 2022 |
Wind from Western SuburbsOil on canvas 180 x 160 cm 2012 | Miserable June No.1Oil on canvas 180 x 160 cm 2017 | Lost CloudsOil on canvas 180 x 480 cm (3 pieces) 2017 |
Magical Dance No.1Oil on canvas 160 x 140 cm 2013 | Did not Burn the Linked CampOil on canvas 200 x 200 cm 2022 | Rivers of Three KingdomsOil on canvas 140 x 160 cm 2022 |
Snow at Six o'clock-2Oil on canvas 180 x 320 cm (2 pieces) 2006 | Snow at Six o'clock-1Oil on canvas 180 x 320 cm (2 pieces) 2006 | A Promise Near the Mountain No.2Oil on canvas 180 x 169 cm 2017 |
Express A View No.1Oil on canvas 180 x 160 cm 2013 | Blue Sky and White CloudOil on canvas 35 x 40 cm 2022 | Valley in the Mirror No.3Oil on canvas 180 x 160 cm 2022 |
Valley in the Mirror No.2Oil on canvas 180 x 160 cm 2022 | Valley in the Mirror No.1Oil on canvas 160 x 560 cm (4 pieces) 2022 | Volcanic RocksOil on canvas 140 x 160 cm 2010 |
Impasto und FluxusOil on canvas 180 x 160 cm 2013 | Riding Electric Bicycle in GanjiakouOil on canvas 35 x 40 cm 2022 | Gallery StudioOil on canvas 35 x 40 cm 2022 |
Working in the AtticOil on canvas 35 x 40 cm 2022 | Sadness Floats over the Pond No.3Acrylic on canvas 160 x 140 cm 2022 | Sadness Floats over the Pond No.1Acrylic on canvas 160 x 140 cm 2022 |
June 4th, 2018Oil on canvas 180 x 160 cm 2018 | No MeasureOil on canvas 35 x 40 cm 2022 |
Artist
Zhu Jinshi
b. 1954, Beijing, China
Zhu Jinshi produces abstract paintings whose surfaces are built up with thick, near-sculptural layers of oil paint. Resembling colorful landscapes, Zhu’s images range in palette and scale, but the artist is known to always apply his oil paint with spatulas and shovels. Producing dense lashings of color, the artist’s method recalls the style and techniques espoused by the German Expressionists, who Zhu was profoundly influenced by during his years living in Berlin. Zhu belonged to a group of Chinese avant-garde artists named the Stars, which formed in 1979 to challenge aesthetic conventions and exhibit their work publicly.
Zhu Jinshi is a pioneer of Chinese abstract art and installation art. At present, he lives and works in Beijing. Zhu’s major solo exhibitions include: Li Bai's Snow, Tang Contemporary Art, Hong Kong (2020); "Wood Character", Fusion Art Center, Beijing (2020); The Ship of Time / Rejecting River Currents (2018), Tang Contemporary Art, Beijing, China; Zhu Jinshi (2016), Yuan Art Museum, Beijing, China; Performance in Paint: Zhu Jinshi (2015), Inside-Out Art Museum, Beijing, China. His major group shows include The Allure of Matter: Material Art from China (2019), Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles,USA;Abstract and Beyond—The Research Exhibition of Abstract Art in China (2016), Minsheng Art Museum, Shanghai, China; 28 Chinese (2013), The Rubell Family Collection, Miami, USA; The 5th Shanghai Biennale: Hyper Design (2006), Shanghai Art Museum, Shanghai, China; Orient/Ation, 4th International Istanbul Biennial in Turkey (1995), Istanbul, Turkey; Chinese Avant-Garde Art (1993), Palace of World Culture, Berlin, Germany; The 2nd Xing Xing (Stars Group) Exhibition (1980), National Art Museum of China, Beijing, China.
Zhu Jinshi’s works have been collected internationally by notable public and private collections:Allison and Warren Kander, USA; Asian Art Museum of San Francisco, San Francisco, USA; Basma Al Sulaiman Museum of Contemporary Art, Saudi Arabia; Brooklyn Museum, New York, USA; Busan Museum of Art, South Korea; Dean Valentine Collection, USA; Delphine Arnault, France; Deutsche Bank, Germany; East West Bank, USA; Fubon Art Foundation, Taipei, Taiwan; Inside-Out Art Museum, Beijing, China; Mario Testino, UK; Minsheng Museum, Shanghai, China; M+ Museum for Visual Culture, Hong Kong, China; National Museum of Contemporary Art, Seoul, South Korea; Picasso Foundation, Málaga, Spain; Rubell Family Collection, Miami, USA; Song Museum, Beijing, China; The Guangdong Museum of Art, Guangzhou, China; The Schaufler Collection, Sindelfingen, Germany; The National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia;Today Art Museum, Beijing, China; Vancouver Art Gallery, Vancouver, Canada; Wall Art Gallery, Beijing, China; White Rabbit Collection, Sydney, Australia.