Press Release
Following Wang Guofeng’s intervention in the gallery space in Beijing, the Hong Kong gallery presents a selection of his conceptual image works. As illustrated in Beijing, where the subject of the gallery space is entirely covered with the recomposed image of the landscape outside of it, the artist focuses on the creation of the image and its relationship to space.

Unlike in his previous series, the works from the Pixelated series exhibited in Hong
Kong require a labor-intensive process in the treatment of the image itself. In previous series, the staging was prepared at length, from its selection to achieving the perfect instant of the shot. The image was left intact; emphasis was on the visual impact of the subject rendered in a crisp color saturated scene; the message came from the subject and its rendering.

In his new series, titled Pixelated, Wang Guofeng researches the web for images ‘covering’ a topic. The images already exist and the artist selects them and re-arranges them, using computer software to collage them and create a completely new image, which subject is not the point anymore. Instead of using an image to convey a message, Wang Guofeng manipulates the image itself. Through this process of re-composition, or rather re-encoding, the artist brings attention to the nature and structure of the image, not to the message it conveys.

For his second solo show in Hong Kong, Wang Guofeng has selected works composed from images of the Hong Kong protests. His message has everything to do with politics and with the events. He is using images charged with meaning and taking away the ability to read that meaning, putting the image itself as a concept the center of his approach.

His deep investigative methodology articulates the connotation of Probe: investigation, inquiry, research, examination and survey. The significance attached to the original image has been completely dispelled. Viewers are presented with a pure abstract visual form constituted of pixels, enlarged beyond their nature. Normally invisible and thus void of interpretative meaning, pixels are staged into representation. The experience challenges perception by the senses as well as the brain analysis of the vision.

From Wang Guofeng’s point of view, once an “event” or an “object” is turned into an image, it detaches itself from its nature. First, it becomes an aesthetic subject and a medium shaped by the image-maker’s attitude and emotion. Second, it becomes a subject that can be edited, modified or falsified. Wang Guofeng’s work questions the relationship between the medium and its object. Technology has accelerated the making and production of images; in the era overloaded with images, what does “image” mean to each and every individual? Once an “event” or an “object” is turned into an image, and presented as historical, news, an advertisement or even as an artwork, what is the significance attached to them?

Wang Guofeng was born in 1967 in Liaoning, China. He now lives and works in
Beijing. In 2014, he was the winner of the “Artist of the year” Award of the AAC (Award of Art China - Photography) and was short-listed for the ING Real Photography Award in 2008.

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About the Artist

Wang Guofeng was born in 1967 in Liaoning Province, China. He graduated from the Fine Arts Department in Inner Mongolia Normal University in Hohhot in 1991 and further studied painting at the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing. Wang Guofeng considers that his training in painting allowed him to go beyond the limits of professional photography. In his photo series Ideality he examines the legacy of Chinese socialism through the so-called Ten Grand buildings of Beijing. Erected in 1959 to mark the tenth anniversary of the People’s Republic, they were conceived as lasting monuments to the achievements of socialist rule. These vast edifices (all completed in a state-mandated ten months) proclaimed the triumph of reason, modernity and people power. Wang Guofeng grew up under socialism and is all too aware of its disregard for the people it claims to represent (a few years ago, the government seized his studio and evicted him without compensation). Yet capitalism can be chaotic, callous and ugly. Wang Guofeng feels suspended between the two, in a state of “absurdity and alienation” that he explores through his photographs. His works are very large and high resolution so that even the most minute details are extremely sharp.

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Also Exhibiting at DE SARTHE

About the Gallery

DE SARTHE is a pioneering platform for boundary-pushing contemporary art from Asia. It has also contained an influential international presence in modern and post-war art since 1977.

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