
Beijing Commune is now presenting Ge Yulu’s second solo exhibition This One is A Painting, So Is That One. The exhibition will last from 14 August till 25 September.
For this exhibition, Ge Yulu disregards the main trajectory that has occupied his previous artistic practice, that is, to challenge the public and collective awareness through intervening in the social space with the carnal body. Instead, Ge Yulu returns to and further embraces painting as the medium that does not necessarily need conceptual understandings but only his physical and embodied involvement.
To be more precise, to mass-produce this series of still-life paintings acquires nothing creative but only Ge Yulu’s ability to retrieve his memory with it, that which has long been inscribed within his body. Such an almost immediate yet passive way of practice has led to what is now shown on the walls, on which the paintings seem to tell individual narratives as much as they disregard them. Ge Yulu’s autobiographical writings, not only printed on the engraved brass plates next to the canvas but the papers hung on the white wall, slowly unfold another means of ‘nothingness’ in addition to the painted objects themselves.
As Ge Yulu said himself, ‘Both my paintings and my text refer to something complex yet are also blind by itself. It is this complicated nothingness that fulfills the exhibition where my emptied subjectivity lies in.’ The graphics fill in the sight as much as they deprive the content of it. On the one hand, Ge Yulu seems to take a new approach distinguishably parted from his previous well-known works and, on the other hand, the attempt of using the fully concentrated bodily involvement to resist the highly demanding creativity is, in fact, the core of this exhibition.
In all, with the means to against mass production via producing works, to formulate new concepts in addition to deconstructing the existed ones, it is not simply the hierarchies among artistic mediums that Ge Yulu seeks to re-discuss via this exhibition but is rather the primary approach, the symbol of ‘Ge Yulu’ conceptualised by himself. This exhibition can either be seen as another means of evoking collective and shared public experience, or that of encountering a new way of making conceptual art. Yet, none of them is precise enough comparing to reading this simply as a bold self-exposure.





Ge Yulu (b. 1990, Wuhan) graduated from the Media Art Department of Hubei Institute of Fine Arts in 2013, and received a M.F.A. from the Experimental Art Department at Central Academy of Fine Arts in 2018. He now lives and works on the outskirts of Beijing. Ge Yulu’s interests lie in the witty expressions in public urban space. Through his art, Ge Yulu strives to mock up the hidden paradox in life. By intervening and negotiating with the public space using his body, Ge Yulu aims to create new dynamic relationships.
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.

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