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Uncanny Valley

Gagosian, Hong Kong

Tue 31 Jan 2023 to Sat 4 Mar 2023

Curated by Yang Zi Owen Fu, Jiang Cheng, Li Hei Di, Li Weiyi, Nabuqi, Song Yuanyuan, Su Yu-Xin, Wang Haiyang, Wang Xiaoqu, Wang Xingwei, Zhang Zipia Gagosian presents Uncanny Valley, a group exhibition opening in Hong Kong. Organized by the Beijing-based independent curator Yang Zi, the exhibition features new works by Chinese artists Owen Fu, Jiang Cheng, Li Hei Di, Li Weiyi, Nabuqi, Song Yuanyuan, Su Yu-Xin, Wang Haiyang, Wang Xiaoqu, Wang Xingwei, and Zhang Zipiao.


Artworks

U-125

Jiang Cheng

U-125, 2022

Oil on canvas

1100 × 1300 mm

51 3/16 x 43 5/16 inches; 130 x 110 cm

© Jiang Cheng. Photo: Tian Quan (田泉). Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

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Sunset at the Old Summer Palace

Wang Xingwei

Sunset at the Old Summer Palace, 2020

Oil on canvas

2450 × 2050 mm

80 11/16 x 96 7/16 inches; 205 x 245 cm

© Wang Xingwei. Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

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Slice of Heart

Wang Xiaoqu

Slice of Heart, 2022

Acrylic on canvas

1550 × 1350 mm

53 1/8 x 61 inches; 135 x 155 cm

© Wang Xiaoqu. Photo: Yang Hao. Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

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12775

Owen Fu

12775, 2022

Acrylic on canvas

1524 × 1016 mm

40 x 60 inches; 101.6 x 152.4 cm

© Owen Fu. Photo: Martin Wong. Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

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Time Like Air in Water

Li Hei Di

Time Like Air in Water, 2022–23

Oil on linen

1550 × 1800 mm

70 7/8 x 61 inches; 180 x 155 cm

© Li Hei Di. Photo: Wenxuan Wang. Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

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Panorama Study

Li Weiyi

Panorama Study, 2021

Video, color, sound, 20 min. 29 sec.

Variable dimensions

© Li Weiyi. Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

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Untitled (Eyelash No. 2)

Nabuqi

Untitled (Eyelash No. 2), 2013–22

Iron

1300 × 1400 × 990 mm

55 1/8 x 51 3/16 x 39 inches; 140 x 130 x 99 cm

© Nabuqi. Photo: Martin Wong. Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

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Clue B

Song Yuanyuan

Clue B, 2022

Oil, charcoal, pencil, and acrylic on canvas

1900 × 2100 mm

82 11/16 x 74 13/16 inches; 210 x 190 cm

© Song Yuanyuan. Photo: Martin Wong. Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

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Smoke becoming cloud #3 (Mauna Kea, Hawaii)

Su Yu-Xin

Smoke becoming cloud #3 (Mauna Kea, Hawaii), 2022

Black volcanic ash, brown volcanic ash, soil, white pearl powder, malachite powder, Thangka pigment, purple shale powder, San Cian Ben glue, ceramic powder, jade ash and other hand-made pigment on board

2050 × 1150 mm

45 1/4 x 80 11/16 inches; 115 x 205 cm

© Su Yu-Xin. Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

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Green Snake

Wang Haiyang

Green Snake, 2022

Acrylic on canvas

550 × 650 mm

25 9/16 x 21 5/8 inches; 65 x 55 cm

© Wang Haiyang. Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

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Brain 02

Zhang Zipiao

Brain 02, 2022

Oil on canvas

1900 × 2300 mm

90 9/16 x 74 13/16 inches; 230 x 190 cm

© Zhang Zipiao. Photo: Yang Hao. Courtesy the artist and Gagosian

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Installation Views

The exhibition’s title is inspired by the theory of the “uncanny valley” proposed by Japanese roboticist Masahiro Mori in 1970. According to Mori, while a humanoid object that bears either a very high or very low level of resemblance to a real person will prompt feelings of affinity, one distinguished by a close but flawed similarity may instead provoke uneasiness and revulsion.

Uncanny Valley explores the emergence of these themes in contemporary paintings, sculptures, and videos by Chinese artists. These works endow the human figure with psychological, existential, and symbolic significance, combining an embodied intimacy with an intentional and specific lack of cohesion that stands apart from most art historical representations of the human form.

In his portraits, Jiang Cheng applies strategies of doubling and blurring to represent figures in painterly modes that depart from the inert image, ultimately transcending the dichotomy between mind and body. Other artists in the exhibition variously depict relationships between figures, objects, and their settings in ways that appear frivolous, as in Wang Xingwei’s Sunset at the Old Summer Palace (2020); sensuous, as in Wang Haiyang’s The 24 Solar Terms and Sex series (2021); or imaginative, as in Owen Fu’s 12775 (2022).

In works by Li Hei Di, Nabuqi, and Wang Xiaoqu, anatomical fragments evoke both the physical limitations of flesh and the boundlessness of desire. Zhang Zipiao transforms the enfolded lobes of the brain into abstract compositions, while in Li Weiyi’s Panorama Study (2021), the members of a crowd imitate each other’s actions in an apparent surrender of volition. Su Yu-Xin uses mineral pigments to depict a sublime landscape, while Wang Haiyang’s Green Snake (2022) features an animal-human hybrid, further extending consideration of physical flesh from individual figures into the wider field of nature. In Song Yuanyuan’s Clue B (2022), the interior of a house is exposed in a vertical section, with rooms that suggest visceral connections, like organs at work.

Yang Zi is an independent curator based in Beijing. Former curator and head of public programs at UCCA Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing, he was awarded the first Sigg Fellowship for Chinese Art Research in 2020. He was a jury member of 2020 Gallery Weekend Beijing, and in 2019 and 2021 served as a primary judge of the Huayu Youth Award. He has written and edited for publications including Artforum, Art Newspaper (China), and LEAP. His exhibitions include The New Normal: Art and China in 2017, UCCA Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing (2017); Pity Party, Sleepcenter, New York (2018); Land of the Lustrous, UCCA Dune, Beidaihe, China (2019); and In Younger Days, New Century Art Foundation, Beijing (2019–20).

Uncanny Valley, 2023, installation view. Photo: Martin Wong. Courtesy Gagosian

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