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Pékin Fine Arts
No. 241 Cao Chang Di Village
Cui Ge Zhuang, Chao Yang District,
Beijing, China 100015   map * 
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Bai Yiluo's New Works Exhibtion
by Pékin Fine Arts
Location: Pekin Fine Arts
Artist(s): BAI Yi Luo
Date: 18 Feb - 16 Apr 2012

This is the 2nd solo exhibition by Bai Yiluo at Pékin Fine Arts, following the 1st solo exhibit in October 2009. The latest series of new works on view will include “Song of Systems” (2011-2012) and “Illumination” (2010-2012).

The systems in “Song of Systems” do not refer to any specific one. Everyone lives within different systems and feels pressure everyday. However, like darkness, systems are complicated and unable to be described in detail, and massive amounts of information are hidden and under wraps and can only be felt and sensed by us as approximations.

These circular “Song of Systems” paintings draw their inspiration from the patterns carved and painted on to old wooden chairs co- mprising the artist’s earlier installation piece “Victory of the Chiefs” (2009) (exhibited in Bai’s last solo exhibit at the gallery). In making this earlier ready-made work of carved chairs, Bai adapted the chairs’ natural wood grain patterns to the richly detailed patterns of African textiles, painting directly on the chairs. At first, Bai hand-painted each chair, but this soon became too much for one pair of hands, and the result in the artist’s view was inefficient and ineffective.To solve these technical problems of production, Bai designed his own ruler, a clear plastic and flexible one, aimed at rendering seemingly endless rows of miniaturized drawn circles, squares and triangles, in the manner of mechanized uniformity and mass-produced outputs, despite still being composed solely by hand-work. Bai’s hand-painted installation of found object chairs stands as a tongue-in-cheek memorial, monumentalizing the national manu- facturing zeal that fuels China’s massive export volumes to Africa and other third world destinations.

In the circular painting series “Song of Systems”, viewers may imagine they see an eye at the centre of each bull’s eye-like painting. This phenomenon came as a surprise to the artist and was not originally intended.This optical illusion effect is the result of looking directly into seemingly endless hand-painted rings completely filling the surface of each circular painting. If Bai’s paintings were of a more classical square or rectangular format, the more conventional forms would no longer have this effect on the viewers’ eye. The “eye” at the centre of each canvas is a happy coincidence, a surprising by-product of Bai’s artistic output.The densely pattern- ed circular paintings possess this strong, almost hypnotic and hallucinatory visual impact, which is difficult to approximate in written text: Better to experience it for oneself.

It took the artist two years to complete his “Illumination” series of paintings.The artist strives to express the feeling of being observed from afar, a feeling that characterizes today’s high tech world of global surveillance. Ever-evolving new forms of technology allow us to view our physical being and the area we inhabit from the vantage point of millions of miles of distance from outer space, seemi- ngly from the same perspective and vantage point of God. All daily activities, feelings, destinies and struggles etc. of human beings can be concentrated down to a single spotlight, created by a vast microscope of interconnected high technology devices, one im- age following another, in rapid-fire succession, in an endless stream of images produced with seemingly unlimited technology and surveillance resources. As we live our lives under such spotlights, how should we reflect on our destiny? Shouldn’t we too start obser- ving ourselves from new and different perspectives?

Bai Yiluo (b. 1968 Luoyang, Henan Province) is a self-taught artist, now working and living in Beijing. Bai adds,“I don’t like giving too much explanation for my works and I hope viewers can feel free to understand them by themselves”.

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