Exhibitions

THE RED MANSION ART PRIZE EXHIBITION 2017

Rosa Johan Uddoh Slade School of Fine Art
Hannah Oram Ruskin School of Fine Art
Sonia Bernac Royal College of Art
Laura Yuile Goldsmiths College
Dejan Mrdja Central Saint Martins
Marie-Aimee Fattouche Chelsea College of Arts
Eva Gold Royal Academy Schools

The judges of the 2017 Red Mansion Art Prize were:

Robin Klassnik Director of Matt’s Gallery, London
Lisa Le Feuvre Head of Sculpture at Henry Moore Institute, Leeds
Alison Wilding Artist
Emma Ridgeway Curator, Modern Art Oxford
Nicolette Kwok Director of the Red Mansion Foundation.


THE RED MANSION ART PRIZE EXHIBITION 2020

The Red Mansion Art Prize Exhibition 2020

Royal Academy | Weston Studio | Burlington Gardens | London | W1S 3ET

Due to the government’s guidelines to close all museums on 17 March the life of this exhibition was cut short. We would like to offer these images of the works to those of you who didn’t have an opportunity to see the show in situ.

To mark its 20th anniversary, The Red Mansion Foundation arranged for the Heads of School and Programme Leaders to travel to China, and to produce a body of work inspired by their travels.

Eliza Bonham Carter

Royal Academy Schools

Eliza Bonham Carter is Curator and Head of the Royal Academy Schools, a position she has held since 2006. She is also Vice Chair of Camden Arts Centre. Bonham Carter’s work normally takes the form of painting, but on going to China she took the opportunity to take steps into digital and image-based media, recording a train journey across China at 300km an hour from East to West. Bonham Carter studied fine art at Ravensbourne College of Art and Design, and completed her MA at the Royal College of Art.

Anthony Gardner

The Ruskin School of Art

Anthony Gardner is Head of the Ruskin School of Art at the University of Oxford and a Fellow of The Queen’s College. He is also a foreign worker in the UK. His research explores the intersections of contemporary art and politics, with particular emphasis on installation, performance, exhibitions and cultural Politically infrastructures. His books include Unbecoming: Postsocialist Art Against (MIT Press, 2015); the Democracy Neue Slowenische Kunst: From anthology (MIT Press, 2015), with Kapital To Capital Zdenka Badovinac and Eda Čufer; and Biennials, Triennials and documenta: The Exhibitions That Created Contemporary Art (Wiley-Blackwell, 2016), co-written with Charles Green.

David Mabb

Goldsmiths College

David Mabb works with appropriated imagery to rethink the political implications of different aesthetic forms in modern art and design history. His work has been exhibited internationally, most recently at Bildmuseet, Umea (2016-17); Z33, Hasselt (2017); and Konstmuseum, Malmö (2018). Solo exhibitions include the William Morris Gallery, London (2015); Focal Point Gallery, Southend (2014); and Delaware Centre for the Contemporary Arts, Wilmington (2010). Mabb teaches at Goldsmiths, University of London where he is Reader in Art and Programme Co-Director MFA Fine Art.

Martin Newth

Chelsea College of Arts

Martin Newth is an artist and Programme Director of Fine Art at Chelsea College of Arts. He studied at Newcastle University and the Slade School of Fine Art. Primarily using photography, but also video and nstallation, Newth explores the processes by which works are made and the material properties of photography. Solo and group exhibitions include MEWO Kunsthalle,Germany (2018); Chongqing Creative Festival, Chongqing (2016); Kuandu Museum of Fine Arts, Taipei (2013); George and Jørgen, London (2011); Axel Lapp Projects, Berlin (2008); and Focal Point Gallery, Southend (2007).

Kieren Reed

Slade School of Fine Art

Kieren Reed’s practice encompasses sculpture, public art, performance and installation, from studies in form to the production of architectural structures. His art is often linked to a process, place or a consideration of a space or situation. Recent projects include Focal Point Gallery, Southend (2016); Herbert Read Gallery, Canterbury (2015); Tate Modern, London (2014); Tate Britain, London (2013); Whitstable Biennial (2012); and Camden Arts Centre, London (2010). Reed works both individually and in collaboration with the artist Abigail Hunt. He is Director at the Slade School of Fine Art, University College London.

Alex Schady

Central Saint Martins

Alex Schady playfully challenges romantic notions of the artist and creativity through sculpture, video and performance. Drawing on pop culture, melodrama and science fiction his practice investigates constructions of masculinity and emotional excess, as well as how seemingly incompatible media can coexist. In 1998 Schady co-founded the gallery space Five Years to explore the relationship between programming, curation and practice. He received his BA (Hons) in Fine Art and a MFA in Art and Critical Theory at Middlesex University, and is currently director of Fine Art at Central Saint Martins.

Jo Stockham

Royal College of Art

Jo Stockham is Professor and Head of Printmaking at the Royal College of Art. Her practice is installation-based, often dealing with the histories of a site, using sculpture, sound projection, found materials and digital technologies. In 1989 she was Henry Moore Fellow at Corpus Christi College, University of Cambridge, which led to solo shows at Kettle’s Yard and Camden Arts Centre. More recently she has exhibited at Matt’s Gallery, London (2018); Turner Contemporary, Margate (2017); Bluecoat Gallery, Liverpool (2017); and Arnolfini, Bristol (1998). Stockham studied Painting at Falmouth School of Art and holds a Master’s degree in Sculpture from Chelsea College of Arts.

The Red Mansion Foundation is a not-for-profit organisation which promotes dialogue between Great Britain and China. The Art Prize was established in 2000 to encourage artistic exchange between these two countries. Seven of the UK’s foremost art colleges take part in the annual competition: Royal Academy Schools, Royal College of Art, Chelsea College of Art, Central Saint Martins, Slade School of Fine Art, Goldsmiths and The Ruskin School of Art.

For more information please visit www.royalacademy.org.uk/exhibition/free-display-red-mansion-anniversary-art-prize-2020

Eliza Bonham Carter

Red Mansion Anniversary Art Prize Exhibition, 2020
Eliza Bonham Carter, Somewhere Between Shanghai and Chengu, 2019
Courtesy of the artist
Photograph by Andy Keate

Anthony Gardner

Red Mansion Anniversary Art Prize Exhibition, 2020
Anthony Gardner (with Meitong Chen and Huw Hallam), I Am A Revolutionary (Apologies to Carey Young), 2020
Courtesy of the artist and collaborators
Photograph by Andy Keate

David Mabb

ed Mansion Anniversary Art Prize Exhibition, 2020
David Mabb, In Search of Chairman Mao: 12 Days in Beijing, 2019-20
Courtesy the artist
Photograph by Andy Keate

Martin Newth

Red Mansion Anniversary Art Prize Exhibition, 2020
Martin Newth, Yangshou, 2020
Courtesy the artist
Photograph by Andy Keate

Kieren Reed

Red Mansion Anniversary Art Prize Exhibition, 2020
Kieren Reed, Normality is constructed, 2020
Courtesy of the artist
Photograph by Andy Keate

Alex Schady

Red Mansion Anniversary Art Prize Exhibition, 2020
Alex Schady (with translation by Sizou Chen), 18 Minutes of Crying in my Hotel Room, 2020
Courtesy of the artist
Photograph by Andy Keate

Jo Stockham

Red Mansion Anniversary Art Prize Exhibition, 2020
Jo Stockham, Symbiosis, 2020
Courtesy of the artist
Photograph by Andy Keate

The Red Mansion Foundation is grateful to Andy Keate for producing all images.


THE RED MANSION ART PRIZE EXHIBITION 2019

The Red Mansion Art Prize Exhibition 2019

Exhibition of the winners’ work at the Weston Studio, Royal Academy of Arts

Open daily from the 18th to 29th May 2019

Royal College of Art, Weston Studio, Royal Academy of Arts, W1J 0BD (Entrance via Burlington House)

The Red Mansion Art Prize was established to promote artistic exchange between China and the UK. Seven of the UK’s foremost art colleges take part in the annual competition: Royal Academy Schools, Royal College of Art, Chelsea College of Art, Central Saint Martins, Slade School of Fine Art, Goldsmiths and The Ruskin School of Art. Each college shortlists six students, from which The Red Mansion panel of judges selects seven winners, one winner from each college.

The winners travelled to China for one month where they lived and worked alongside other artists. The exhibition is a showcase of the works created by the finalists as a result of their experience.

Ibrahim Cisse Royal College of Art
Paula Morison Slade School of Fine Art
Alistair Debling Ruskin School of Fine Art
Rachel Cheung Goldsmiths College
Joe Richardson Central Saint Martins
Ant Hamlyn Chelsea College of Arts
Debora Delmar Royal Academy Schools

The 2018 panel of Judges was composed of:

Lisa Panting Director at Hollybush Gardens
Ceri Hand Director of Programme at Somerset House
Andrew Renton Independent Curator and Lecturer at Goldsmiths
Sonya Dyer Artist
Nicolette Kwok Director of the Red Mansion Foundation.

Artist statements

Rachel Cheung Goldsmiths College

Rachel Cheung is a performance and interdisciplinary artist based in London. Her practice investigates the futurologies of humans and technology in conjunction with science fictions within contemporary art. Cheung’s live performances look at the role of the human body within a science-fictional performance space; playing between ‘hard’ (physical) and ‘soft’ (virtual) spaces by using choreographic and improvised movements to activate installations, sculptures and objects.

Rachel-Cheung
Grid Games: The World Is Your Oyster, 2018.
Performance installation. 3 hours. Image credit: Gwil Hughes.

Ibrahim Cisse Royal College of Art

Poet and editor, Ibrahim Cisse created Lost in Timein 2017. Lost in Time is a publishing venture dedicated to recording and documenting Cisse’s surroundings, notably artists’ reflections and practices. As an artist, Cisse embraces the poetic as a means to expand his writing beyond the literal. These experimentations are leading to scripts, visual art (installations, photography, collages) and performances. Cisse is involved in educational programmes and initiatives taking place between Europe and the African continent. With these endeavours, Cisse aims to further the potential for art to emancipate and create realities grounded in imaginations.

Untitled, December 2018. Photomontage. 5 x 5 inches. Image credit: Ibrahim Cisse

 

Paula Morison Slade School of Fine Art

Paula Morison (b. 1985, Swindon) is a conceptual artist working in a variety of media. Her practice is broadly focused on how we, as humans, try to order the world around us. She looks at the systems people create and the behaviours we exhibit that help us exert perceived control over our existence. Her interests include data, quantitative information and translation (in the widest sense of the word).

Learning to Read (the 79 characters I know on the front cover of The People’s Daily), 2019.

 

Joe Richardson Central Saint Martins

Joe Richardson’s work examines male behaviour in pubs, cartoons, and film, dealing with anxiety surrounding success and the performance of ‘masculinity’. The works operate as commentators, facades, and stages for masculinity to be played out on, examined, and ridiculed, questioning whether failure can provide cathartic liberation from masculine norms.


DINNER WITH MR MACHINE, 2018. Video.

Ant Hamlyn Chelsea College of Arts

Ant Hamlyn (b. 1993, Northampton) lives and works in London. Hamlyn’s work draws on stagecraft, magic, arcades, the body and our relationship with modern technology to explore our shifting enthusiasms towards contemporary life. Hamlyn offers up sculptural objects, texts and kinetic installations which aim not to act as hyperbolic motivational offerings but attempt to delve into surreal, transient and sometimes humorous states of being.

I’ve Got Itchy Feet about the Future, 2019.

 

Debora Delmar Royal Academy Schools

Débora Delmar (b. 1986, Mexico City) lives and works in London where she is completing the Postgraduate Programme at the Royal Academy Schools. Through her work Delmar investigates consumer culture, capitalist lifestyles, and aspirational aesthetics. She is particularly focused on the societal effects of globalisation such as class issues and cultural hegemony. Delmar creates multi-sensory installations that commonly are composed of elements such as fabricated and appropriated objects, reproductions of iPhone photographs, and elements such as scent, sound and performance, as well as online interventions.


Table Line (Mayfair, London), from the series iPhone Photo Archive (Cafés), 2019.Image courtesy of Gallleria Pìu and the artists. Photo credit: Stefano Maniero.


THE RED MANSION ART PRIZE EXHIBITION 2016

Exhibition dates: Wednesday 16 March - Tuesday 22 March 2016

Triangle Space & Cookhouse

Chelsea College of Arts, 16 John Islip Street, London SW1P 4JU

The Red Mansion Art Prize was established to promote artistic exchange between China and the UK.

During the summer of 2015, the talented winners of the Red Mansion Art Prize travelled to China for one month. They were given studio space and the opportunity to live and work alongside local artists with flights, accommodation and a spending allowance provided for them.

An exhibition of the works produced by the students over this time is being held at the Triangle Space & Cookhouse, Chelsea College of Arts from Wednesday 16 March - Tuesday 22 March. The opening times of the exhibition are weekdays 10:00 to 18:00, Saturday 10:00 to 16:00.

This year’s panel of Judges was composed of:
Penny Johnson, Director of the Government Art Collection;
Jenni Lomax
, Director of the Camden Arts Centre;
Andrew Stahl
, Head of Undergraduate Painting, Slade School of Fine Art
Nicolette Kwok, Director of the Red Mansion Foundation.

The exhibition will feature work by the following 2015 Art Prize winners:

Maud Craigie Slade School of Fine Art
Mark Mindel The Ruskin School of Art
Nicole Vinokur Royal College of Art
Andrew Sunderland Goldsmiths, University of London
Hyeji Woo Central Saint Martins, UAL
Tess Kamoen Chelsea College of Arts, UAL
Evelyn O’Connor Royal Academy Schools
Alia Pathan Goldsmiths, University of London (2014 winner)

This year Chelsea Old Library, renowned for its collections of artists’ publications, will also host a special exhibition of Diaries created by winners from the past ten years of the Red Mansion Prize.

Red Mansion Art Prize Exhibition details


THE RED MANSION ART PRIZE EXHIBITION 2015

Exhibition dates: Friday 20 March – Friday 27 March, 10:00 – 18:00

Slade Research Centre, UCL, Woburn Square, London, WC1H 0AB

The Red Mansion Art Prize was established to promote artistic exchange between China and the UK.

During the summer of 2014, the talented winners of the Red Mansion Art Prize travelled to China for one month. They were given studio space and the opportunity to live and work alongside local artists with flights, accommodation and a spending allowance provided for them.

An exhibition of the works produced by the students over this time is being held at the Slade Research Centre from Friday 20th to Friday 27th March. The opening times of the exhibition are 10:00 to 18:00.

The judges of the 2015 Red Mansion Art Prize were Kirsty Ogg, Director at Bloomberg New Contemporaries; Michael Newman, Art critic and Historian; Matt Williams, Artist; Carey Young, Artist, and Nicolette Kwok, Director of The Red Mansion Foundation.

The exhibition will feature work by the following 2014 art prize winners:

Emily Motto The Ruskin School of Art
Tristan Barlow Slade School of Fine Art
Julie Born Schwartz Royal Academy Schools
Dominic Hawgood Royal College of Art
Adam Tylicki Central Saint Martins
Cadi Froehlich Chelsea College of Arts

 

Red Mansion Art Prize Exhibition details


THE RED MANSION ART PRIZE EXHIBITION 2014

12th – 19th April 2014

The Royal College of Art

Dyson Building, 1 Hester Road, London, SW11 4AN

The Red Mansion Art Prize was established to promote artistic exchange between China and the UK.

During the summer of 2013, the talented winners of the Red Mansion Art Prize travelled to China for one month. They were given studio space and the opportunity to live and work alongside local artists with flights, accommodation and a spending allowance provided for them.

An exhibition of the works produced by the students over this time is being held at The Royal College of Art from Saturday 12th to Saturday 19th April, including the weekend. The opening times of the exhibition are 12:00 to 17:00.

The judges of the 2013 Red Mansion Art Prize were Tessa Jackson (Chief Executive, INIVA), Stephanie Rosenthal (Chief Curator at the Hayward Gallery), Alison Turnbull (Artist) and Nicolette Kwok (Director of the Red Mansion Foundation).

The exhibition will feature work by the 2013 winners:

Ghazaleh Avarzamani          Central Saint Martins

Tom Railton                           Chelsea College of Art & Design

Sung Eun Chin                      Goldsmiths College

Caroline Abbotts                   The Royal Academy Schools

Abigail Sidebotham               The Royal College of Art

Jakob Rowlinson                   The Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art

Imran Peretta                        The Slade School of Fine Art

Red Mansion Art Prize Exhibition details

Click here to see photographs from the Private View


THE RED MANSION ART PRIZE EXHIBITION 2013

15th - 23rd April 2012,

The Lethaby Gallery, University of the Arts London

Granary Building, 1 Granary Square, London, N1C 4AA

The Red Mansion Art Prize was established to promote artistic exchange between China and the UK.

During the summer of 2012, the talented winners of the Red Mansion Art Prize travelled to China for one month. They were given studio space and the opportunity to live and work alongside local artists with flights, accommodation and a spending allowance provided for them.

An exhibition of the works produced by the students over this time is being held at The Lethaby Gallery, Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design from Monday 15th to Tuesday 23rd April, including Saturday 20th April. The opening times of the exhibition are Monday to Friday 10am – 6pm and Saturday 10 – 4pm.

The judges of the 2012 Red Mansion Art Prize were Ben Roberts (Programme Coordinator, Camden Arts Centre), Eliza Bonham Carter (Head of Royal Academy Schools), Matt Williams (Curator, ICA), Vanessa Jackson (Senior Tutor, Royal Academy Schools) and Nicolette Kwok (Director of the Red Mansion Foundation).

The exhibition will feature work by 2012 winners:

Martin Cordiano Central Saint Martins College of Art

Hana Janeckova Chelsea College of Art and Design

Choterina Freer Goldsmiths College

Andrew Mealor The Royal Academy Schools

Elizabeth Gossling The Royal College of Art

 

Shakyra Campbell The Ruskin School of Drawing and Fine Art

Teo Ormond-Skeaping The Slade School of Fine Art

Red Mansion Art Prize Exhibition details

Click here to see photographs from the Private View


THE TALE OF ANGELS - GROUP SHOW AT THE RED MANSION FOUNDATION

Featured Artists: Gao Shiqiang, Jiang Zhi, Kwok Ying, Miao Xiaochun,
Shi Jinsong, Xiang Jing and Xiao Yu
Curated by: Jiang Jiehong
Dates: 26th February - 24th April 2009

Blades and latex: A Chinese re-imagining of a traditional Christian icon...
Angels are first described in the Bible. Created by God as a separate, higher order of creatures than humans, they possess aspects of intelligence, emotions, and free will. Today, angels are continuously imagined and represented, both in literature and visually, beyond their theological context and biblical origins; at the same time, the image of angels has been utilized for curiosity, communication or faith.

In the history of Western art, there have been numerous images representing angels, usually winged in appearance, implying their nature as God's heralds and flying creatures. In China, these spiritual beings have always been deemed as Western, yet, to many, the contemporary imaginings of angels do not necessarily derive from the original source, (their description in the Bible), but instead depend on the visual interpretations of Western art. This exhibition, The Tale of Angels, aims to set up a framework for discussion, and to encourage and invite Chinese artists to expand their boundaries, and develop new ideas for visual response. It intends to re-examine not only the theoretical notion of an angel, but also, more significantly, the ways in which angels, particularly in the context of Western culture, could be re-imagined. To the artist Shi Jinsong, the beauty of angels has an innocent quality. At an initial glance, his recent stainless steel installation of a Christmas tree has a glorious metallic shine, but it a closer look reveals some fearsome sharpened blades. This work exposes the balance between the beauty of angels and their potentially wrathful nature, and more importantly, the conflict between the amiability of 'imagination' and the injuriousness of 'realisation'. Jiang Zhi has imagined another chilling visualization; that of the flayed flesh of an angel, vulnerable in its nakedness and desolation, like a discarded skin.

Two lectures by the curator will be given during the course of the show, dates and topics tbc. Dr Jiang Jiehong is Senior Lecturer and Director of the Centre for Chinese Visual Arts at Birmingham Institute of Art and Design, Birmingham City University.


DOWN TOWN PRODUCTION

An Exhibition of Chinese Urban Art
Curated by Yan Lei
23rd September – 21st November 2008

Down Town Production is a dynamic group show bringing cutting-edge, urban Chinese art to the UK. Curated by one of China's leading artists, Yan Lei, the exhibition brings together eight rising stars of contemporary Chinese art whose work reflects the recent dramatic social and economic transformation of China. It is anticipated that 70% of China's 1.3 billion population will live in urban areas by 2035. At the end of 2002, records showed that China's urban population totalled 502 million, living in over 21,000 towns and cities. Down Town Production is a selection of art that reflects and explores this dramatic shift.

The artists will give us a taste of China's emerging popular culture, with works as such as ground-breaking L.A.S.E.R. graffiti by conceptual artist, DJ and rapper, MC Yan. L.A.S.E.R. tagging is the very newest form of graffiti art developed only a year ago and currently cropping up in cities all over the world. Courtesy of MC-Yan, London will experience a major laser-tagging event this autumn, as part of the exhibition.

Down Town Production is was staged by The Red Mansion Foundation, which has been working to bring China’s contemporary art scene to the UK for almost a decade, discovering new talent and establishing an exchange program between London and China for some of the biggest names in contemporary art. Many of the works in the exhibition are be for sale.

The Down Town Production show took place both inside and outside the Red Mansion Foundation's gallery space, which was completely transformed for the purpose of this exhibition. Curator, Yan Lei, distorted the traditional "white cube" concept and created a totally new environment for the show that was particularly striking in the context of the Red Mansion, a listed Robert Adam building.

The exhibition also included a one-off special performance by Brain Failure, trailblazers in China's burgeoning punk scene, who played at the ICA on 17th October. Formed in 1997, the band were the first to emerge from the People's Republic of China, embracing Western punk ideals and now enjoying commercial success at home and in the US. This was their first UK performance, and offers an insight into a youth movement that is gathering force. The bill also included Stanley Kubrick Goes Shopping, a new collaboration between Youth of Killing Joke and Dennis Morris, lead vocalist of Basement 5 and music photographer, famed for his seminal images of the Sex Pistols and Bob Marley.

The "Down Town Production" artists included:

MC YAN
MC Yan is a truly urban creative; a conceptual artist, graffiti artist and rapper. Recently MC Yan has produced new work using laser projection technology, writing words and images on Beijing's skyscrapers, putting the debate about the plight of the individual in full public view. MC Yan will be tagging a prominent London landmark to demonstrate the art of laser tagging for the first time ever in London.

LIU DING
Liu Ding has exhibited extensively internationally. Liu works mainly with installation, however he also works across a variety of media including painting, performance and photography. After moving to Beijing, Liu Ding collaborated with nine artists to launch the Complete Art Experience Project, an artist-led initiative that produces group and solo exhibitions with a focus on interdisciplinary artistic experiments. He has exhibited internationally, including China Power Station at the Serpentine Gallery in 2006.

HONG HAO
Hong Hao is a major graphic artist and photographer whose intensely witty and sophisticated work celebrates the tradition of the artist's book in contemporary Western and ancient Chinese forms. Born in China in 1965, on the eve of the Cultural Revolution, Hong graduated from the printmaking department at Beijing's Academy of Fine Arts in 1989, the year of the Tiananmen Square protests. He is best know for his photographic series, My Things, which are composed of thousands of scanned images of objects from his own life and several will be included in Down Town Production. He has shown at galleries and museums in China and all over the world including the USA, Ireland, France, Czech Republic, Canada, Sweden, Australia and Japan.

MENG LUDING
Meng Luding is one of China's leading abstract painters. His work, Enlightenment of Adam and Eve in the New Age, went on record as the pioneering work for the '85 Art Movement. The Football, one of his expressionist works, is considered a masterpiece of the genre, pushing the medium of oil painting into a new realm. His recent works show a strong personal style and unique art concepts and demonstrate a new visual language and production method.

LIU ZHENCHEN
Liu Zhenchen was born in Shanghai but has lived in France for the last eight years, so that Shanghai is now only a memory to him, a compressed experience. His recent photographs and films, which are documentary and poetic hybrids, show the frantic changes taking place in Shanghai and their direct impact on its residents. Zhenchen Liu has been awarded numerous prizes. His latest video was named Best Experimental Film at France's 9th Aubagne International Film Festival and was screened at the Centre Pompidou in Paris.

LAO LIU
Most Chinese people know Lao Liu as a rock 'n' roll musician from the 80's. Now, he works as a photographer and lives in Beijing. In one of his more recent works, Lao Liu managed to elude border checks at the Ya Lu River, smuggling his camera into North Korea to take a series of photographs. Entitled Dance over the Border (Wu Guo San Ba Xian) they record and express the passion and romanticism of the local population. Liu has shown in the USA and China.

ZHAO SHAORUO
Zhao Shaoruo was born in China but lives and works in Espoo, Finland. Moving between Beijing, Hong Kong and Helsinki, Zhao has experienced a sense of displacement and his work explores loneliness and the absurdity of human incompetence. He reinterprets photographs for instance in Under the Name of the City, he replaces the faces of the passers-by in city scenes with his own face and places his own name on all the adverts, banners and street signs. He shows regularly in Finland and has also showed in Germany, Japan, Czech Republic, Indonesia and the V&A Museum in London. He will have four photographs in the exhibition.

WANG HUI
Whilst much of China's most visible contemporary architecture ranges from glittering towers created by international architects to the kitsch of Thames Town (a mock English suburb near Shanghai), China, naturally, has it own architects who are now building for themselves, rather than for the state. Wang Hui, a founding partner of Urbanus Architecture & Design, is one such architect. With branches in Beijing and Shenzhen, Urbanus projects include urban design, architecture, urban landscape design, interior design, exhibition design and public art installations. Urbanus is recognized as one of the avant-garde among young Chinese firms. Their concept of urbane urbanity instead of chaotic urbanism characterizes each Urbanus project and, as a firm, they aim to restore humanity back to China's vast and fast-growing metropolises. Hui will make wallpaper to dress the gallery space and an installation for Down Town Production.

Top Chinese punk band Brain Failure playing at ICA on 17th October 2008, supported by Stanley Kubrick Goes Shopping. Down Town Production curator Yan Lei has been collaborating with seminal Chinese punk band Brain Failure for many years, making paintings of them and inviting them to participate in exhibitions. The aim is to introduce another dimension to the traditional visual art exhibition and to open up possibilities for creativity and interpretation. Brain Failure is one of the leading punk bands in China. Founded by high school dropout, Xiao Rong, in 1997, Brain Failure's members are the first generation of Chinese musicians since the 1949 Communist Revolution to grow-up in relative political stability, economic prosperity and exposure to western popular culture. Brain Failure brings a power and a passion to the stage that reflects the years of playing underground gigs in Beijing. Lead singer Xiao Rong is relentless and tireless, a man possessed. Brain Failure is influenced by bands like The Clash, Ramones, Rancid, Op Ivy and Green Day. Their lyrics tend to deal with the social problems and attitudes of present day China, rather than the political issues. An almost complete lack of media interest and a general aversion to rock music in China hampered their progress at home, but they have found a warmer reception in the outside world. Their US tour in 2003 led to the release of the 2004 album American Dreamer, a reference perhaps to the fulfilment of a long-awaited dream for recognition in the music world. Further acceptance came in the form of a casting for a European Levi's Commercial and coverage across US printed press, with appearances on MTVU and MTV Chi, MTV's new Asian American channel.

Their latest EP Beijing Calling features Public Enemy's Chuck D.

Stanley Kubrick Goes Shopping: Supporting Brain Failure is a group who, in stark contast to Brain Failure, are steeped in the history of British rock 'n' roll. Recently formed, Stanley Kubrick Goes Shopping comprises legendary photographer Dennis Morris (best known for his seminal images of Bob Marley and the Sex Pistols during the 1970's); producer, Youth (ex-Killing Joke) and Phillipe (ex-Telephon). Yan Lei invited the band to be part of Down Town Production as a result of collaborative work with Dennis Morris - Lei is working with elements of Morris' iconic Sex Pistol imagery - while Youth has been working with Red Mansion artist Cang Xin on the latter's Exchanged Identity series.

ADDITIONAL EVENT: LASER TAGGING
There will be a laser-tagging event attached to the gig brought to us by Chinese rapper and graffiti artist, MC Yan, one of the Down Town Production artists. Laser tagging has been developed in the last 2 years and it is the latest trend in graffiti writing. MC Yan will be bringing to London a major interactive laser tagging event at a London landmark. MC Yan has also collaborated with Brain Failure on a track that will be released in China in October of this year.

Check out some laser tagging at: graffiti research lab

To view images of the LASER tagging event at TATE Modern on
September 27th, please CLICK HERE


PAINTING AFTER PAINTING

A solo exhibition by Yang Qian, curated by Huang Du
29th April - 4th June 2008
The Red Mansion Foundation, London, UK
Open Monday to Friday by appointment only

The Red Mansion Foundation is pleased to present its fourth exhibition of works by Yang Qian, curated by Huang Du, editor of Avant Garde Today, at its space in 46 Portland Place. Yang Qian, born in Chengdu (China) in 1959, has shown extensively on an international level, at the Today Art Museum in Beijing, the Shanghai Biennale in 2006, the National Museum of contemporary art in Seoul, and at the Taipei Art Museum, among other places.

Yang Qian became known for his gauzy and dreamlike "photorealist" paintings of women at their toilette. Although richly lit and sensuously positioned, these steamy shots of showers and bathrooms ultimately contain a certain Oriental reticence; the veils of steam that coil around the figures conceal as well as reveal their form, creating an erotic tension between subject and painter, viewer and voyeur.

Yang Qian continues to play with the notion of multi-layered meaning in painting with his new work. He seeks to deconstruct the ocular-centrism of art and to liberate the act of observation and appreciation. In the "Bathroom" series, images overlap between truth and illusion as we view the subject through the film of a mirror, a sheen of water-droplets, and mist. Following the hidden realities of these reflective and reflected images, Yang Qian's new work can be categorized as "dual paintings". His technique involves painting over surfaces of already finished pieces of work, using a colourless fluorescent paint, so that the painting presents a different visual image, depending on whether they are viewed in regular or UV light. This allows for a multiplicity of images, and a new aspect of interaction to emerge.

Yang Qian states that his aim with this series of "dual paintings" was to formally disrupt and go beyond the perceived limitations of a 2 dimensional painting. His new work seeks to engage and interact with the surroundings in a way that totally contradicts the expected restraints of painting. His "dual paintings" are classic in style, but also absorb new media, thus creating a new form of art. Yang Qian's new work also involves the concept of kinetic paintings - again, these involve and interact with the viewer in a wholly unexpected manner, breaking with the traditional preconceptions of painting. This exhibition as a whole in fact illustrates how the artist seeks to subvert the normal concept, and re-define the connotation and extension of the paintings, through the idiom "Only renovation can rejuvenate painting".

To visit the China Now website CLICK HERE