Press Release
Beijing Commune is pleased to announce the opening of artist Song Ta’s first solo exhibition Song Ta: The Loveliest Guy at the gallery on September 30th, 2014. The exhibition will continue until November 15th, 2014.

Most of Song Ta’s works are rooted in the artist’s observations and sampling of reality. His practice includes photography, video, installation, painting, and performance, among other mediums. Song’s artworks do not emphasise refinement of traditional aesthetics or expression of visual beauty; rather, he adopts a relaxed, comical attitude, enjoying the conceptual freedom art allows him.

This exhibition revolves around Song Ta’s various ‘investigations’ into different types of ‘people.’ The three new works on display initially look as if they are independent and unrelated.
They seem to take visual aesthetics to their barest form. However, these three artworks mask Song’s playful response to and expression of artistic systems and the logic of traditional artistic expression. One might also call this an investigation into, or a dialectics of, self-entertainment. For the artwork in the main gallery space, These Are Your Test Scores, and You’re Still Playing Around?, Song Ta collects 30 different exam papers, each with the score 59.5%, to string them together and exhibit them publically. The project emerged from the artist’s research into the exam papers of elementary school students in impoverished and minority regions. After conducting this research, the artist discovered that there are many people who share this ‘common fate.’

Comprising a collage of 60 images, People Who Write Like Me presents the photographs and calligraphy (handwritten characters) of 30 people whose handwritings look like Song Ta’s. Some were found through the internet, while others are people in the artist’s life. The conclusion of Song Ta’s research is the Chinese phrase ‘one’s writing mirrors the self,’ and characters written in marker are the artist’s favorites.

The video installation piece Who Is the Loveliest Guy? is inspired by Wei Wei’s 1951 essay Who Are the Most Beloved People?, a benevolent and amiable depiction of the People’s Volunteer Army during the Korean War. In Song’s film, a group of heroic naval officers are challenged to ride a roller coaster. During this high-speed, exciting journey, will the brave soldiers stay brave and composed in the face of this roller coaster? In close-up photos, perhaps we might discover who is the loveliest guy.

Song Ta employs the juxtaposition and linking of different relaxed, comedic forms to introduce modes of thought aimed at established institutions, knowledge systems, and power structures. While this research is variously playful, jocular, and self-amused, it is also a sincere and serious inquiry. Song’s works are not merely expressions of an individual viewpoint; they grow out of specific investigations to present a more general notion of reality, site, and phenomenon.

Song Ta was born in Guangzhou in 1988. He received his BFA in Education from Guangzhou Academy of Fine Arts in 2010, and currently lives and works in Guangzhou. As one of the emerging young artists, his works have been shown in many group exhibitions, such as The First ‘CAFAM Future’ Exhibition: Sub-phenomena: Report on the State of Chinese Young Art at China Central Academy of Fine Arts Museum in Beijing (2012), ON | OFF: China’s Young Artists in Concept and Practice at Ullens Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing (2013) and Positive Space at Times Museum in Guangzhou, China (2014). His recent exhibitions include Unwritten at Marres Centre for Contemporary Culture, Maastricht, the Netherlands (2014) and The 8th Shenzhen Sculpture Biennale: We have never participated at OCT Contemporary Art Terminal, Shenzhen, China (2014).
About the Artist

Song Ta (b. Guangdong, 1988) graduated from the Education Department of Guangzhou Academy of Fine Arts in 2010. He currently lives and works in Guangzhou and Shenzhen. Song Ta participated in the 8th Shenzhen Sculpture Biennale, the 6th “Home Works: A Forum on Cultural Practices” (Ashkal Alwan, Beirut, Lebanon), and the 2018 New Museum Triennial. He also participated in group shows at Central Academy of Fine Arts Art Museum; Ullens Center for Contemporary Art; Times Art Museum, Guangdong; Kunsthalle Bern, Switzerland; Marres Contemporary Art Center, Maastricht, Netherlands; Times Art Center, Berlin; Julia Stoschek Collection Foundation, Düsseldorf; Taikang Space, Beijing; Nassau Art Association, Wiesbaden, Germany; Gwangju Asian Cultural Center, South Korea; CASS Sculpture Foundation, UK; Paul Klee Art Museum, Switzerland; Kunsthaus Bregenz, Austria; Para/Site, Hong Kong; Kunsthall Lund, Sweden; UAE The Art Foundation, Sharjah; Nanjing University of the Arts Art Museum and other institutions. His works have entered the public collection of M+ Visual Arts Museum, Hong Kong; Kadist Foundation, San Francisco/Paris; New Century Art Foundation, Beijing, etc. In 2020, Song Ta was nominated for the PCS Art Prize by the Municipal Art Museum of Porto, Portugal.

View Artist Profile

Also Exhibiting at Beijing Commune

About the Gallery

Founded in 2004, Beijing Commune is now located in 798 Art Factory, Beijing. Its initial programs were mainly group shows exploring various currents in contemporary art while now it primarily focuses on solo shows to carry on the in-depth research.

View Gallery Profile
Address
798 Art District, No. 4 Jiuxianqiao Road
Chaoyang District
Beijing
China
Opening Hours
Tuesday – Saturday
10am – 6pm
(1)
Beijing Beijing Commune, 798 Art District, No. 4 Jiuxianqiao Road
Beijing Commune
798 Art District, No. 4 Jiuxianqiao Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing, China

Opening hours
Tuesday – Saturday
10am – 6pm
The art world in focus