Press Release

The figurative and concise character portrayals, the varied and highly pure use of color, and the intricate density of visual information all serve as evidence of the painter’s ongoing contemplation. Since 2018, Zhang Gong has systematically incorporated religious themes as a pathway for reflection and creation, gaining individual insights and potential enlightenment for the future. We witness the painter’s transition in his work, moving from external absorption and communication to internal reflection and exploration, depicting certain underlying tones and mechanisms of world culture through the study and reinterpretation of Christian themes.

The exhibition title ‘Winter Will End’ refers to temporality and also expresses the expectation that winter will eventually pass, and spring will inevitably come, reflecting the season of the exhibition and metaphorically alluding to societal circumstances. In this exhibition, Zhang Gong not only deepens his personal focus on religious history classics in recent years but also extends the tentacles of his painting to richer art history and more diverse forms of practice. In these works, we often see a ‘protagonist’ positioned centrally, occupying the frame and the narrative. Under the artist’s brush, they often appear with swift gestures, as if surging from a distant image, steadfastly advancing towards their destination beyond the frame, their actions and dynamics seemingly bringing about a transformative force in the world. The urgent actions and dynamic energy depicted in the figures or the calm and tranquility after eliminating all distractions create immense tension.

In _Advent 8 _(2022), the exaggerated limbs of the horses and the immense momentum implied by the pencil lines suggest the undeniable power of the black horseman symbolizing famine as he gallops forward. In The Grain of Wheat (2023), mature wheat bends its waist, fallen grains become symbols of death and rebirth, while the colorful rays of the sun illuminate the earth, as if everything is about to restart. In other works such as The Only (2020), _My Soul 8 _(2021), and Love 1 (2023), themes of determination, love, and hope are intertwined and conveyed.

In these paintings, Zhang Gong fully utilises media such as oil, acrylic, pencil, oil pastel, and scraper. While still employing the method of hard-edged outlining of shapes seen in styles like manga, he transcends the flat application commonly used in traditional manga by enriching it as a creative tool for depicting specific content. The thick and intricate dots, lines, and colours give rise to three-dimensional images, light, and materiality in what was originally close to ‘flat’ images. In the deeper details of the images, the speed and economy pursued in manga painting are reversed into a long and diligent labor in Zhang Gong’s creation: the artist meticulously depicts the fluctuating patterns of light and shadow on the seemingly small canvas, the changes in colour of every leaf, and even the reflections on them, conveying the painter’s devoutness to the art and the intended message.

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About the Artist

Zhang Gong was born in Beijing in 1959. He was a professor in the Department of Information Art and Design at the Academy of Fine Arts, Tsinghua University, and lives and works in Beijing. After graduating from the Central Academy of Arts and Design in 1993, he started to develop his distinctive painting style rooted in surrealism and pop culture. Drawing inspiration from a panoply of American and Japanese cartoons and the environments of urban spaces, Zhang works with mediums such as animation and photography. Zhang has exhibited worldwide, his recent solo exhibition include Advent, WHITE SPACE (Caochangdi), Beijing, China (2022); Revelations, KWM Art Center, Beijing, China (2020); Beyond Description, Beyond Boundary - Paintings of Zhang Gong, Kwai Fung Hin Art Gallery, Hong Kong, China (2019). His works have been shown in Forms and Effects: Ukiyo-e to Anime, Kresge Foundation Gallery, Ramapo College, Mahwah, NJ (2017); Hypallage - The Post-Modern Mode of Chinese Contemporary Art, The OCT Contemporary Art Center, Shenzhen, China (2008), FICTION LOVE, Singapore Art Museum, Singapore; Bund 18 Creative Center, Shanghai, China; MOCA Shanghai, Shanghai, China (2006). His animation films have been featured at international festivals such as Cinémathèque Québécoise, Montreal, Canada; Brussels Animation Films Festival, Brussels, Belgium; London International Animation Festival, London, UK; and Without Borders Film Festival, Rome, Italy. He has been awarded for his animated short film Trees (2003) at: 3rd Animation Academy Awards, Animation School of Beijing Film Academy, Beijing, China (2003); 10th Asian Film and Culture Festival, Lyon, France (2004) and 3rd CTVA Academy Awards, China (2004).

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Address
F1, BLDG D7
Yard No. 3
Jinhang East Road, Shunyi
Beijing
China
Opening Hours
Tuesday–Sunday: 10am–6pm
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Beijing F1, BLDG D7, Yard No. 3
White Space
F1, BLDG D7, Yard No. 3, Jinhang East Road, Shunyi, Beijing, China
+86 10 80491779
http://whitespace.cn

Opening hours
Tuesday–Sunday: 10am–6pm
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