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Galerie Urs Meile
No. 10, Caochangdi Cun, Cui Gezhuang Xiang,
PRC -100015 Beijing, Chaoyang District,
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tel: +86 10 643 333 93     fax: +86 10 643 302 03
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Wang Xingwei's solo exhibition
by Galerie Urs Meile
Location: Galerie Urs Meile Beijing
Artist(s): WANG Xingwei
Date: 5 Nov 2011 - 12 Feb 2012

Galerie Urs Meile is pleased to announce the opening of a solo exhibition of Wang Xingwei’s (*1969 in Shengyang, China; lives and works in Beijing, China) recent works.

Wang Xingwei does not come from an artistic family. It was a natural-born love of painting, rather than his background, that led him to become an artist. The end of 1980s marked the official start of his career as a painter. Since the mid-1990s, his artistic practice, which is rich in subtle cultural and historical references, has been defined by the concurrency of diverse conceptual, stylistic and formal experimentations.

Wang Xingwei is no longer the artistic youth that was known for wearing hand-knitted woollen trousers. He has constructed an exquisitely unique and picturesque language of seemingly disconnected elements - conceptual entries from his own “visual dictionary”. These elements are juxtaposed in order to purposely dismantle the acknowledged logic of thinking and create, by means of their disruptive power, new and unpredictable interpretative possibilities.

This exhibition will show a collection of nearly 20 of Wang Xingwei’s paintings from 2007 up until the present day. The exhibition has been divided into two parts in accordance with the parameters of the exhibition space – Indoor Views and Outdoor Views. The latter will present audiences with the portrait Mao Yan (2010), which depicts the peer and good friend of the artist, as well as Big Tree by the Film Museum (2011), a traditional life study. This is a rare opportunity to view such works, given the artist’s usual approach of working from readymade images. The Indoor Views space will investigate the continuous evolution and progression of the artist’s Old Lady series, which consists of a number of very similar works. As the curator Zhang Li said: “They present a lively, complex art form, the one we call ‘painting’.”

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