me-craze: self-image in contemporary chinese painting by zheng jiayin
TRANSCRIPT
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Me-craze:SELF-IMAGE IN CONTEMPORARY CHINESE PAINTING
Zheng Jiayin
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ABSTRACT
After the downfall of Communist hero Mao and his ideology, people were left with a
sudden void, no longer having anyone or anything worthwhile to believe in. Increasingly,
new generations of artists started turning inwards to represent on canvas their individual
psyches in relation to the now jaded society and their political past. Epic depictions of
selflessness abundant in the Cultural Revolution are in effect replaced by micro-narratives
revolving the individual. The trend of using the artists own image to create art is evident in
mediums across the board, but this paper centres on painters, and in particular, what
painting the self means to three different artists Fang Lijun, Yue Minjun, and Yang Shaobin.
SELF-RIDICULING ANTI-HERO
In Maos famous 1942 Yanan talks on Literature and
Art, he defined art as purely a conduit for political
message, designed to serve the whole of society, not the
individual. During his era, socialist realist art was the
model art form taught to artists-in-training such as Fang
Lijun. However, by the time of 1989 after the TiananmenIncident put an explosive end to all individual ideals,
such realist styles and techniques were subverted to
become a personal form of expression for disenchanted artists.1
At this time, Fang Lijun began painting himself as an army of bald and bored characters
involved in the oddest, most meaningless situations lumbering around, swimming,
floating through air.
1In essence, the pursuit of social ideals in art before the 1980s has been replaced by the self-conscious expression of
individualist values in 1990s art.Leng Lin, 2000. Shi wo/Its Me. In John Clark (ed.), Chinese Art at the End of the Millennium. Hong Kong: New Media, 1424.
Fang Lijun, prolific self-painter
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Series II No. 2, for instance, shows a central figure that appears to be part yawning, part
howling, against a row of almost identical glassy-eyed figures silently trudging behind. The
painting is permeated with an ambiguous mood the characters are dressed in plain attire
that denies categorization, and the flat background of endless azure skies points to no
specific location. Overall there is an overwhelming sense of ennui and existential void.
This deliberate negation of meaning in Fangs work is perhaps its central meaning, as an
exercise of purging the value systems that had shaped him and his social reality. His self-
images, lackadaisical and directionless, satirize the revolutionary heroes of social realist
propaganda that had instructed citizens the right way to conduct themselves. Maos maxim
of selflessness towards the collective interests of the proletariat is rendered hollow here by
a display of life that has become meaningless, purposeless and disorientated2.
Fang understood that in these times, to express a serious, authentic statement in hopes ofchange, or to clash head-on with authorities, would be very naive. The only admirable
attitude is to play the fool, engage in grey-humoured cynicism and by mocking yourself,
you mock the system.
Fang says this of the current situation: To be an intellectual, one needs to hold independent
thoughts and views. But in China, intellectuals serve the government and are used just as a
tool. So how can they have independent thought? The tool must either die, or hide what he
2Phrases from Maos Little Red Book
Fang Lijun, Series II, No. 2 (1992). Oil on canvas. 200x200cm.
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thinks. While appearing ambivalent, his repeated paintings of his own image in fact encode
a quiet resistance of the mind against official discourse, as well as an awareness of
individual experience and what is being done to him.
Such resistance should by no means be read as political dissent3, but as an internal measure
through which he maintains his subjectivity and ability to think for himself. By playing the
fool on the outside, he keeps himself from becoming a real fool.
A fool is someone still trusting after being taken in a hundred times. We'd rather be lost,
bored, crisis-ridden misguided punks than be cheated. Don't even consider trying the old
methods on us, we'll riddle your dogma with holes, then discard it in a rubbish heap. 4
THE SELF AS A COMMERCIAL BRAND
Yue Minjun is another illustrious practitioner of realistic
self-portraiture, producing serial images of himself that
feature the trademark face-splitting laugh and eyes tightly
clenched from hilarious strain.
This exaggerated self was first created as Yue Minjun
searched for a style that could accurately portray his inner
feelings. And what to do it better than with a medium he
knew really well himself? In an early interview with critic Li Xianting, Yue Minjun said: "I
began to work on images of people that helped to relieve the unhappiness in my heart.
Before I produced these people, I felt my art lacked power. Art should be an expression of
one's particular feelings and should be direct and deep. So I drew one person, and then
added another and another until there were crowds of them. Then I felt my emotions were
fully expressed."
As evident, this tendency towards simple, direct expression and the use of multiplication
to generate visual force was there right from the start. By drawing on the vibrant colour
scheme of folk art and distilling complex meanings into simplistic compositions, Yue is able
to create works that appeal and are accepted by the broad public.
3
Cynical realism is essentially a de-politicized art. Artists assume no ideological stance, but state that it is impossible for themto avoid politics completely it is embedded in their very being.4Fang Lijun, 1992
Yue Minjuns iconic laughing mug
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Over time, Yue Minjun's self-images began to take on features of a commercial brand. The
wide-toothed grin makes each painting instantly recognisable, and most tellingly, his
characters always possess a frozen, plastic-like skin quality, which brings to mind shiny
plastic figurines found in mega toy stores. By putting these images through ceaseless
repetition, Yue engineers an atmosphere of hollowness and superficiality.
Yue seeks to sell himself as an idol, but instead of disseminating his icon through television
and movies, as per normal, he does so using the traditional medium of painting.5
Yue Minjun. Ninety-nine Idol series (1996). (Right) No. 73. Oil on canvas. 25.5x20.5cm.
These key concepts are cleverly illustrated in a set of oil paintings titled Ninety-nine Idol
Series. On ninety-nine canvases, Yue Minjun paints his own face with a stiffened guffaw
and eyes tightly shut from slightly varying angles. Many of these faces are extreme close-
ups which claustrophobically occupy every available space on the canvas, allowing us to
play the voyeur and observe minute details of their powerful, vivid expressions. With no
narrative contexts or even the rest of the body depicted here, Yue Minjun brings usexclusively to the laughing face that made him so popular. Repeating the same visage
ninety-nine times without any narrative setting may seem like overkill, but this is probably
intended by Yue to imbed it deep in us, so that it could perform its function as an idol a
life force which influences our lives and regulates our conduct by setting itself as an
example.
5'Creation of a Superficial Idol', a dialogue between Li Xianting and Yue Min Jun, 2002
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With the embrace of the gaudy aesthetic of superficial idols, Yues self-images are far from
fulfilling traditional aesthetic standards of poetry and sublime beauty. Bright pink skin,
crimson lips, a long row of perfectly white teeth all of these are reminiscent of advertising
prints and consumer images driven by kitsch, vulgar tastes.
However, art critic Pi Li contends that this is what distinguishes him from the rest. The
biggest difference between other contemporary artists and Yue Minjun, is that while other
artists make boring moments sublime and poetic he resolutely employs a mode of
degradation and adulteration of the concepts of sublime and poetic.
RED-HUED VIOLENCE: EXORCISING DEMONS WITHIN
Self-trained artist Yang Shaobin had gone through difficult
struggles to find his voice, especially in the early days when he
tried to fit into the group of Cynical Realists. It was only much
later that he discovered his own naturalist-expressive red
violence style.
In 1991, when Yang Shaobin arrived in Yuanmingyuan village,
he found himself among a tight-knit community of painters who
influenced one another and observed a collective consciousness.
Cynical Realism was huge at that time, with Fang Lijun as its
natural head. Yang Shaobin admits that he, too, was a follower:
"Fang Lijuns aura was too strong, it was his thing, "Cynical
Realism", it had nothing to do with me".
His works of this period were often characterised as lesser imitations of Liu Weis playfulstyle, his technique still undeveloped, almost nave. For this there is only one reason: he was
still at the stage of regurgitating general concepts pertaining to the movement, and had yet
to synchronize his individual experience and judgment with his method.
Yang Shaobin eventually came to terms with his incompatibility with Cynical Realisms
visual language due to inherent personality differences Cynical Realists dealt with
problems with humour and mischievous anti-sociability, but Yang was much more serious
by nature, so his tension and anxiety contrasted awkwardly with the cool nonchalance he
Yang Shaobin, cynical-realist-
turned-expressionist
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was trying to portray. Besides, the central issue in his work violence was something he
could not shrug off by means of humour, so the only way would be to approach it head-on,
no laughter, no jokes.
Yang Shaobin. Untitled No. 15 (2000). Oil on canvas. 160x140cm.
In 2000, Yang Shaobin created Untitled No. 15, where two mangled figures surface from a
cloud-like shape. This insistent focus on violence is likely a result of Yangs past occupation
as a police officer, where personal sightings and complicity in brutal acts made him highly
sensitive to blood and aggression. To Yang, the images that haunt him are those of violence.
The figures he paints are based loosely on his own image, and in doing so, Yang Shaobin
implicates himself as a representative of humans capability of committing violence against
the self and others. Here, there are no signs of a realistic setting, rather, the figures are
suspended in blank space, giving unadulterated attention to the violent impulse as our
primitive human characteristic emerging from within.
In this work, Yang's brush strokes appear to be slapped onto the canvas, as if the
characters (himself) are being subjected to a painful beating. To reinforce the image of injury
infliction, blood dribbles downwards from their open wounds. On the canvas, colours
fade into one another in seamless exchanges, out of which Yang Shaobin builds up the two
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heads. Overall, the atmosphere created is very evocative, fantastic and horrific, with a strong
sense of the works painterly quality.
Red is a potent colour to use here, particularly because of the multiple meanings it carries in
China. Red represents luck, prosperity, success and marriage. It is also the colour of Chinas
national flag and communism. It hints seductively at love, passion, danger and power.
Therefore, Yangs choice of such a densely symbolic colour, along with his masterful
treatment of the figures and paint, makes his work a powerful statement on historical and
cultural violence, as well as basic human nature.
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REFERENCES
1. Wu Hung.Making History: Wu Hung On Contemporary Art. Timezone 8 Limited, 2008.
2. Michael Sullivan.Art And Artists Of Twentieth Century. University of California Press, 1996.
3. Geremie R.Barme et al. Chinas New Art, Post 1989. Hong Kong: Hanart TZ Gallery, 1993.
4. Leng Lin. Shi wo/Its Me. In John Clark (ed.), Chinese Art at the End of the Millennium.
Hong Kong: New Media, 2000.
5. Peggy Wang. Contemporary Chinese Art: Primary Documents. The Museum of Modern Art,
2010.
6. Liu Chun.A History of Chinese Oil Paintings. Beijing: China Youth Publishing House, 2005.
7. Lu Peng ed. Fang Lijun: Thread of Time. Beijing: Culture And Art Publishing House, 2009.8. Yue Minjun. A Few Words Behind My Works, unpublished manuscript, 2005.
9. Li Xianting. Post-89 essay, 1998.
10. Pi Li. As Mad as You.
11. Diana Yeh. The Wisdom of Fools.
12. Andrew Solomon. Their Irony, Humor (and Art) Can Save China, New York Times,
1993.
13. David Barboza and Lynn Zhang.Why Do Artists Say: Look At Me, Artzine China.