Tang Contemporary Art is pleased to announce the opening of artist Hou Jianan's solo exhibition Picnic at our Beijing Headquarters Space on July 8th, 2023. The exhibition will present more than 20 new pieces of work by the artist.
Activities in the style of "picnics" had already emerged in notable works by ancient Greek and Roman writers such as Ovid, Plutarch and Seneca. It also appears in many Chinese poems and historic records. However, the word "picnic" is a product of the contemporary. The picnic in a modern sense first developed in 17th century France, with its origin being the French word "Pique-Nique". French nobility later brought this new method of recreation to Britain, where it grew into the modern word "picnic". The new chapter of "picnics" was accompanied by important historic changes such as the Industrial Revolution and the Enclosure Movement. They catalyzed the rapid expansion of cities, resulted in teeming industries and a multitude of towering chimneys. This then led to the swelling of the working class. The success of the Industrial Revolution and expansions of oversees colonies produced a number of rising urban and petty bourgeoisie groups. Escape from cities and return to the countryside has in turn become the hot topic at the time, the new trend that swept across Europe. In 1863, Manet completed his well-known work The Luncheon on the Grass, which exhibited vividly the more challenging methods of depicting a picnic scene. It was an experience frozen in historic episodes.
Returning to the theme of "picnic" displayed in Hou Jianan's new works. Ubiquitous advertising and social media have alienated the picnic into a performative activity. Hou believes that the picnic culture has become a miniature version of the spectacle society. Although scenery is a type of image, it still attempts to obscure the signs of said alienation. In Hou's works, such alienation has been successfully built up as a dissociation from real-life experiences. Here, the artist uses the more typical way of painting to emphasize the official tone of disengagement, viewing "picnic" as a method of redefining and exploring identity recognition. Today, our consumption-based social interactions are mostly established upon consumer and material culture. The picnic, as a simpler and more natural way of life, provides us a opportunity to reflect and contemplate on the sense of identity.
In Symbolic Power and Social Order, Lyotard suggested a kind of symbology theory that discussed the meaning of symbols and the rules of their usage. It also dives into the role of said activities within the functioning of social order. The consumer society's rapidly replaced commodities, such as fresh flowers, fruits and candles, are evidently shown in Hou Jianan's works. They shaped a ceremony/landscape that satisfies the fleeting delights of the masses, while also making observations and retrospections on consumer society and virtual space. Invisible forces that engulf society, such as cognitively refreshing waves of information, surface-level scans and frenzied desires, are transformed into a mesmerizing jungle that uses its bright and beautiful facade to conceal its numerous traps and pitfalls. Simultaneously, the above-mentioned symbolic objects are utilized to generate new materialistic relationships and societal layouts.
Hou Jianan does not insist on methods of treatment such as touch, texture, shading and form in his creations, he uses modelling tools to gain the desired source material, then enrich the monotony of digital color using layered acrylics, hence the most ordinary scenes become fluid and anamorphic, manifesting a strong allegory of the costs of image conversion. This mannered self-landscaping displays a sense of dilation and craving, with scenes taking shape as the artist plays the role of administrator. This making of illusions rekindled the attention on the correlation between image and human experiences, thus image and the stimulated audience become interlinked. Scenery is a resurrected desolation once filled with decay and debris, as dark currents drift through the meretricious splendor, fading in and out of the straying and swaying candlelight.
Press release courtesy Tang Contemporary Art.
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