The Chinese artist Liu Ye's meticulous, colorful canvases convey his love of literature in the first publication dedicated to his paintings of books. Liu is known for his precise, deftly rendered representational paintings. Drawn from contemporary culture and old master painting, his wide-ranging visual touchstones include Piet Mondrian, Miffy the Bunny, Balthus, and Rogier van der Weyden. In this new publication devoted to his book paintings, the artist examines the book as both a physical object and cultural totem. Playing with geometry and perspective, Liu creates extraordinary and disorienting portraits of this most familiar subject.
Liu's
Book Painting series, begun in 2013, depicts close-up views of books that are turned open to reveal empty pages, an approach that emphasizes the object's form over its content. Rendering books' material structure--endpapers, binding, spine--in sensual detail, these paintings indicate an obsession with the book as an object and a lifelong love of literature. Liu's father was a children's book author who introduced him to Western writers at a young age, fueling his curiosity and imagination. Many of the books in his father's collection were banned in Cultural Revolution-era China and the artist read them secretly throughout his childhood. This formative experience figures in his popular
Banned Books series and in his book paintings in general.
Published on the occasion of a solo exhibition presented at David Zwirner New York in 2020, this catalogue includes new writing by the acclaimed poet Zhu Zhu, who traces the evolution of the book form in Liu's work, as well as an interview with the artist by Hans Ulrich Obrist.
Author: Liu YePublisher: David Zwirner Books
Published: 09/28/2021
Pages: 192
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 2.46lbs
Size: 11.20h x 8.50w x 0.80d
ISBN13: 9781644230367
ISBN10: 1644230364
BISAC Categories:-
Art |
History | Contemporary (1945- )-
Art |
Individual Artists | Monographs-
Art |
Asian | ChineseAbout the Author
Beijing-born painter Liu Ye (b. 1964) combines abstraction and figuration to create bold, meditative paintings that investigate the intersections of history and representation through a distinct vocabulary that transcends traditional Eastern and Western art-historical categories. Drawing on both his childhood memories of China and his early education in Europe, the artist's carefully balanced, methodical compositions play on perspective and ways of seeing, while also referencing a diverse range of aesthetic, literary, and cultural sources. Among these are the fairy-tale worlds of Hans Christian Andersen and Lewis Carroll; literature by Leo Tolstoy and Vladimir Nabokov; and modernist painting, architecture, and design, from Balthus to the Bauhaus. These various points of reference have inspired Liu's artistic output for more than twenty-five years, resulting in a body of work that is at once rich in its historical quotations and singularly his own.
Zhu Zhu is a poet, curator, and art critic. He is the author of various collections of poetry, prose, and art criticism, including
Blue Smoke (2004) and
The Wild Great Wall (2018). He is the recipient of the Anne Kao Poetry Prize and the Chinese Contemporary Art Award for criticism.
Hans Ulrich Obrist is artistic director of the Serpentine Galleries in London. Prior to this, he was the curator of the Musée d'Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris. He has curated more than three hundred shows since 1991. Obrist's recent publications include
Ways of Curating (2014),
The Age of Earthquakes (2015),
Lives of the Artists, Lives of the Architects (2015),
Mondialité (2017),
Somewhere Totally Else (2018), and
The Athens Dialogues (2018).