"In this object, simultaneously intense and partial, insistent although accidental, in this contradictory objet, we must understand the fragile moment of a disfiguration that nonetheless teaches us what figuration is."— Georges Didi-Huberman, Devant l'image
Galerie Urs Meile is pleased to announce Xie Qi's latest solo exhibition, The Summer Heat Has Been Gone For Years, opening on August 28, 2021. Artist Xie Qi's first appearance at Galerie Urs Meile will present powerful works on canvas dating back to 2019.
The body and portraits have long been important motifs in Xie Qi's painting, appearing through- out her various creative periods. Drawing on a sweeping imagination and rich perceptions, Xie Qi bestows on these shifting figures the warmth of emotion, the tension of desire, and tones of gloom. She sources her subjects of depiction from friends, everyday objects (portrait-bearing banknotes, plants resembling human organs), candid photographs and classic themes, capturing and depicting them in an approach akin to "psychological profiling"—the artist refines the components of the image through observation and perception, adding or removing details, destroying and reconstituting whole forms, restoring the figure to magnify parts and moments filled with dramatic tension. Xie Qi's depiction takes place between recollection and creation. The concealed brushstrokes, blurred boundaries and phantom colours of the pictures often radiate with a mysterious air from a past time.
The Summer Heat Has Been Gone For Years is a look back, a look back on the long, hot days of summer break; that sense of time so abundant it causes the mind to wander has been utterly wiped out by the unpredictably shifting present, leaving listlessness and the unknown as its only traces. This exhibition is also a look back on the recent creative trajectory of artist Xie Qi, and a concentrated presentation of her bold experimentation and breakthroughs in recent years. The exhibition presentation continues along the artist's past creative thread, allowing for a comprehensive understanding of the artist's unique individual style and painting language. In such works as Green (2019), Soft Ball (2020), Clock (2019) and Shades of Red (2019), the artist has employed her trademark gloomy, hazy colour transitions, a method for concealing the brushstrokes that fills the painting with a sense of a chromatic shroud, the soft edges of the forms concealed within provocative lighting. In an entirely new series of works from 2021, the artist has intentionally inserted harder edges and more rigid colour fields into the picture, a subtle shift that is most clearly embodied in the works Density of Green (2021) and Wrinkles from Summer (2021). In Daydream (2021), Mosquito Song (2021), and A Riddle (2021), Xie Qi has entered into a state of push and pull between abstraction and figuration, as the figure details of the picture fade into lighting formed from the coalescence of colour. Within this push and pull, these objects with their still faintly discernible outlines present a liquid or vaporous flow. These real bodies and faces drift amidst the picture, like phantom illusions. By depicting pure flesh, Xie Qi's creations have given shape to humanity's seemingly empty spirit and undercurrents of desire, and her painting has come to bind the shattered resonance between the vulgar and divine.
Press release courtesy Galerie Urs Meile.
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