Li Qing: Lighthouse and Cradle

Li Qing: Lighthouse and Cradle

D06, 798 Art District, No.2 Jiuxianqiao Road, Chaoyang Dst Beijing, 100096, China Sunday, September 12, 2021–Wednesday, October 27, 2021 Opening Reception: Sunday, September 12, 2021, 4 p.m.–6 p.m.


window· (s)top by li qing

Li Qing

Window· (S)TOP, 2020

Price on Request

west bund by li qing

Li Qing

West Bund, 2020–2021

Price on Request

view from the pangu hotel by li qing

Li Qing

View From The Pangu Hotel, 2017–2019

Price on Request

the human baby who flew into space from the cradle of bauhaus or kabakov by li qing

Li Qing

The Human Baby Who Flew Into Space From The Cradle of Bauhaus or Kabakov, 2021

Price on Request

the birth of beauty by li qing

Li Qing

The Birth of Beauty, 2021

Price on Request

tetris window· exhibition center by li qing

Li Qing

Tetris Window· Exhibition Center, 2019

Price on Request

spot the difference • sales lady(there are 5 differences in the two paintings) by li qing

Li Qing

Spot the Difference • Sales Lady(There Are 5 Differences in the Two Paintings), 2019

Price on Request

spot the difference • rear windows(there are 6 differences in the two paintings) by li qing

Li Qing

Spot The Difference • Rear Windows(There are 6 differences in the two paintings), 2019–2020

Price on Request

rear window· colorful stones by li qing

Li Qing

Rear Window· Colorful Stones, 2021

Price on Request

neighbour's window · hangzhou citic bank building (norman foster) by li qing

Li Qing

Neighbour's Window · Hangzhou CITIC Bank Building (Norman Foster), 2021

Price on Request

neighbor's window· decorated eggs by li qing

Li Qing

Neighbor's Window· Decorated Eggs, 2021

Price on Request

landscape with the coast by li qing

Li Qing

Landscape with The Coast, 2020

Price on Request

Tang Contemporary Art is proud to announce the opening of Li Qing’s solo exhibition “Lighthouse and Cradle”, held in both of the gallery’s Beijing spaces on September 12. Curated by Cui Cancan, the exhibition will showcase Li Qing’s important series “Window”, “Spot the Difference”, “Images of Mutual Undoing and Unity”, “Hangzhou House”, as well as his most recent work from 2021.   

--

The Lighthouse and the Cradle   

The “lighthouse” and the “cradle” come from imagery found in the works of Li Qing, and are symbols for Utopia in literature. The exhibition takes “the lighthouse and the cradle” as a starting point and point of embarkation between multiple series, as metaphors for ideals and arrival, as it takes a new look at the continuous stories that have unfolded in Li Qing’s works since 2005.   

The exhibition is divided into two parts. In an architectural space rendered in the Bauhaus style, symbolizing the cradle of modern design, a temporary tent appearing like a light swaying over the surface of the sea becomes the focus, or bonfire, at the center of the two spaces. Works from the three series “Spot the Differences,” “Mutual Undoing,” and “Windows” surround the space to the right and left, becoming background noise that leads to reality. A carpet in the ruins of an old house, a kitschy Hangzhou building in a mixture of styles, faces in magazines, the artist’s travels, and two giant group portraits of discarded refrigerators draw the gaze to a circuitous, overlapping world. Here, image, sign and reality intertwine, conceal and alternate between one another.   

Two worlds, one with maze-like nested chambers carrying a monumental grand narrative, the cradle of Bauhaus, and metaphors of Ilya Kabakov flying into space; the other a multilevel space connected by arches, pulsing with the drifting dust of ruins, the smooth aesthetic of reality, glossy landmark buildings, and a yellow tent like a lighthouse in the grass. Mirror images of reality and interchanging representations, the basic traits of Li Qing's art, thread throughout.   

As a leading representative of the new generation painters, Li Qing’s creative thread and field of vision are extraordinarily rich. Unlike his peers, his painting no longer focuses on working within the four corners of the picture, but instead constantly expands painting’s external space and ways of seeing. In the “Spot the Differences” series, two similar pictures turn seeing into recognition. Which painting is closer to the truth? What is the relationship between painting, with its realist tradition, and reality today? Seeing and truth have become themes of our time. The questioning continues in the “Mutual Undoing” series, where two intertextual images become one in an entirely new picture. The stacked result is further from the truth, resulting in a “reconstruction” that is neither one nor the other. Reconstruction and representation point to the mysteries of painted expression, and the significance of rhetoric.   

As an imagining and metaphor for the outside world, the window is the best carrier for "representation.” In Li Qing's works, window frames and lattices become part of the structure of the picture, with the wear and tear of the old windows fusing together with the paint and brushwork. Windows are the landscape of the city, carrying stories, restoring hope, dividing distances. Every window has implications of class and power. In his newest works, Li Qing no longer continues the literary character of his past works, or the discussion of time and space. The window returns to itself, referencing the existential relationship between itself, architecture and the city. The structure of the window frame forms a stark contrast with the smooth aesthetics and glossy landmark buildings of the picture. Painting has returned to reality, to a radical aesthetic.   

Language never exists in isolation. The uninterrupted experimentation and sustained momentum across these various series are outgrowths of the themes Li Qing has been following since 2005: information and image in the technological age, the social mechanisms and power dynamics of seeing, the relationship between people, architecture and the city amidst globalization, the patterns and disciplining of aesthetics in the consumer age. Between the lofty towers and the swaying tent, the literary implications between the “lighthouse and the cradle” begin to fade and become the antithesis of Utopia. 


Curator: Cui Cancan