Pearl Lam Galleries Shanghai is pleased to present
Landscapes of the Heart, Chinese abstract artist Su Dong Ping’s inaugural solo exhibition with the gallery. The exhibition will feature approximately twenty of the artist’s recent small-scale and large-scale paintings, composed of oil and mixed media on canvas, or acrylic on plastic board.
Su’s ‘action paintings’, full of rich contradictions and feelings, consist of thick impasto layered with raw images and a combination of compact and expansive brushwork. His masterful use of black in conjunction with an array of contrasting colours produces strong works that radiate energy. In fact, Su believes that the quality of an artwork should solely be determined by the amount of energy the artist expends in its creation.
Although Su’s works share similarities with expressionist traditions, his process is very much rooted in traditional Chinese philosophies and calligraphy. He was exposed early on to calligraphy through his father, who taught him the concept of ‘bu miao’, which means allowing the spirit and thoughts to flow on paper spontaneously and decisively rather than adhering to set rules. To reach such a state, Su enters a meditative trance, clearing his mind of outside distractions. He is then able to be instantaneous and use quick brushstrokes to create his abstract paintings, which he says are a balance of chance and personal preference. The artist believes one must work between the two to actualise freedom and the truth of expression.
Tension is at the heart of Su Dong Ping’s works; for him, the act of painting is an emotional and psychological necessity. Born in 1958 in Shenyang, where he continues to be based, Su’s works are informed by his formative years, which occurred during and in the aftermath of the Cultural Revolution. The increased competition to attend art school post-Mao delayed the start of his formal art education, which began in 1979 in the oil painting department of Lu Xun Academy of Fine Arts in his hometown. Once there, however, he soon realised that his artistic desires were not going to be fulfilled due to the school’s rigid emphasis on Russian social realism, which required precise sketching and conflicted with Su’s need for spontaneous expression. Although China was beginning to open up at the time, back then Su had no exposure to abstract expressionism and only saw pictures of works by Matisse, Cézanne, Van Gogh, and Fauvist artists primarily through back channels. Su had to educate himself on different approaches to painting, which is why he believes an artist must persist in the pursuit of his/her own definition of art in order to progress. Having been repressed by societal, educational, and even familial restrictions - as his father believed that the arts should not rebel against accepted traditions and cultural norms - Su has an urge to create art that is subversive and revolutionary.
Art critic Philip Dodd writes,
“[Su Dong Ping] produces emotionally charged paintings that are landscapes of the shifting contours of the heart, ever more important in a world where only material objects are seen as valuable.”
Pearl Lam says: “I am very pleased to present Su Dong Ping’s richly layered, expressive work to a wider international audience. Besides his Shanghai solo exhibition, the Galleries will also feature Su’s work at our Art Basel Hong Kong stand. Su is a prime example of a mid-career artist who has yet to achieve the recognition he deserves. The Galleries hopes to change that with Su entering our stable of artists.”Press release courtesy Pearl Lam Galleries.