Yan Lei: Sparkling(Upgraded)

WHEN:
This event has already passed
Support your favorite events. Click and your avatar will appear at the bottom right.
City Weekend Says

This multi-media installation is an extension of Yan Lei's original Sparkling series, which uses the spotlight that tracks performers while they are on stage as a vehicle to examine the contrast between art and the power structure that supports it. Portraits of Chinese leaders, airline hostesses, Andy Warhol and of the artist himself are set against a background of blazing light.


Updated 2 y, 7 m ago
Share+
Contributor Description

About the Exhibition

July 25, 2009, Beijing — The Ullens Center for Contemporary Art (UCCA) presents Yan Lei's solo exhibition, Sparkling (Upgraded), which opens to the public on July 26. Composed of light boxes, artist-designed wallpaper, and a shining crystal floor, the exhibition reflects the artist's continuing mixture of the complex, artificial and ambiguous into his artistic approach for this mixed-media installation. The exhibition will be on display until October 11.

In 2007, after participating in Documenta 12, Yan Lei created the "Sparkling" series and took part in an exhibition in Aspen, USA. "Sparkling" refers to the spotlight continuously tracking performers onstage. Perhaps it was the artist's awareness and reflection on the performance-like dimension that accompanies art biennials (and triennials) and contemporary art production. In this series, using his customary blurred sarcasm, Yan Lei reviews the contradiction-filled relationship between himself, Documenta, and the art power structure. The background of the work is filled with a blazing light, which resembles that radiant light in which Chinese leaders appeared in images made during the Cultural Revolution. With this glowing brightness are contrasted images of: the artist himself; Hong Hao, his collaborator in forging a "letter of invitation" which falsely invited artists to participate in a previous Documenta; the renowned Andy Warhol; the portraits of Roger Buergel and Ruth Noack, curators of Documenta 12 in 2007; and images of air hostesses in airline company ads from the 1950s and 1960s. Seemingly, these mutually unconnected people are being cast into the spotlight onstage, to the acclaim of many. Beside these works are images of the artist taken in China, Kassel, and finally at the Aspen Art Museum (the exhibition venue). This arrangement appears to be a "psychology course" reflecting on the artist's anxiety-filled and contradictory relationship with Documenta and the global art system

2 y, 9 m ago