Group Exhibition - Low Fever

Group Exhibition - Low Fever

10/F, H Queen's, 80 Queen's Road Central Hong Kong, China Thursday, March 18, 2021–Saturday, April 17, 2021 Opening Reception: Thursday, March 18, 2021, 6 p.m.–8 p.m.


white peach vii by chen ruofan

Chen Ruofan

White Peach VII, 2020

Price on Request

white peach i by chen ruofan

Chen Ruofan

White Peach I, 2020

Price on Request

unknown sense screen i by chen ruofan

Chen Ruofan

Unknown Sense Screen I, 2020

Price on Request

unknown sense - still life from the screen of iphone x by chen ruofan

Chen Ruofan

Unknown Sense - Still life from the screen of iPhone X, 2020

Price on Request

v-tiger tech by itsuki  kaito

Itsuki Kaito

V-Tiger Tech, 2017

Price on Request

tight intelligence by itsuki  kaito

Itsuki Kaito

Tight Intelligence, 2019

Price on Request

knife bird ⅰ by itsuki  kaito

Itsuki Kaito

Knife bird Ⅰ, 2017

Price on Request

assassin by itsuki  kaito

Itsuki Kaito

Assassin, 2017

Price on Request

amazones hands by itsuki  kaito

Itsuki Kaito

Amazones hands, 2019

Not Available

white waves by wang xiyao

Wang Xiyao

White Waves, 2018

Price on Request

summer symposium no.2 by wang xiyao

Wang Xiyao

Summer Symposium no.2

Not Available

pale kings blue by wang xiyao

Wang Xiyao

Pale Kings Blue, 2019

Not Available

On the 18th of March 2021, Tang Contemporary Art is proud to present “Low Fever,” the Hong Kong space’s first group exhibition of women artists born in the 1990s. This show will present more than twenty works by six artists: Chen Ruofan, Etsu Egami, Kaito Itsuki, Wang Xuebing, Wang Xiyao, and Yan Bingqian.  

Artists born in the 1990s grew up at a time when information technologies were developing rapidly, bureaucracy was being reduced, and knowledge was being shared in an egalitarian way. They matured as previous generations were establishing comparative methods for them. This generation of artists has now made its way into the contemporary art scene, and in a moment when gender has become a global focal point, women artists of this generation no longer merely articulate the distance or antagonism between the sexes in their paintings. Their methods are diverse meta-expressions; taking advantage of their times, these women artists have had the ability to make breakthroughs in meta-painting and “sexist” painting. More than any previous generation, those born in the 1990s find themselves in an intermediate state. When faced with attacks from both the past and future, what kinds of languages or attitudes should they employ? They keenly and casually move their brushes across the canvas, and their sensitive pre-emption of knee-jerk reactions to the “youth crisis” presents as a low-grade fever.  

A low fever is a physical symptom that can be felt. Whether an artist confronts the larger predicaments of our era, the environment outside of art, or the issue of art itself, this feeling can be painted. Art is always a multi-sensory experience of the world, and sensation and the body are naturally enmeshed with one another. In a chapter entitled “Painting and Sensation,” Gilles Deleuze wrote, “What is painted on the canvas is the body, not insofar as it is represented as an object, but insofar as it is experienced as sustaining this sensation.”  

Etsu Egami paints her Rainbow portraits with flowing colors, clean compositions, and strong brushwork. She has studied and lived in many countries around the world, and she has explored the essence of communication through personal experiences of mishearing and misreading. She believes that the language of rainbows really resonates with her state of mind; it has become a symbolic language for communication that has gradually permeated her painting style.  

Etsu Egami paints her Rainbow portraits with flowing colors, clean compositions, and strong brushwork. She has studied and lived in many countries around the world, and she has explored the essence of communication through personal experiences of mishearing and misreading. She believes that the language of rainbows really resonates with her state of mind; it has become a symbolic language for communication that has gradually permeated her painting style.  

In White Peach’s microscopic compositions of obscure bodily forms and in Unknown Sense’s minute considerations of humanity’s existence between technology and reality, Chen Ruofan explores the digital through muted tones and a fusion of new media and traditional techniques. She asks: In a cyborg human society, how much of life can truly be felt?  

Wang Xuebing is inspired by the use of high-contrast colored lighting in Dario Argento’s horror films, which strengthens the visual effects of color and light. She paints the handbags, jewelry, and fashions from luxury goods advertisements; the objects are relocated and made ambiguous, and their unbalanced or absurd proportions in the paintings make them seem oversized, fragmented, or thick. She explores the possibilities between the worthless and the luxurious, as well as the multiplicity of fictions and realities.  

In her paintings, Kaito Itsuki creates new mythological figures and fictional organisms. They symbolize the states of the human soul, and by highlighting the deformity or alienation of these states, she reflects the process of human self-identification. She discusses how people should create their own specific identities and use mythology as a metaphor to analyze some of these unintelligible human behaviors.  

Sequences of people and things can change, and Yan Bingqian chooses to describe them in a restrained way. Atmospheric linear brushstrokes, indistinct substances, and extremely emotional visual rhetoric coexist in her work.