WANG GUANGYI
On occasion, Christie's has a direct financial int… 顯示更多 Property from the Collection of Howard and Patricia Farber
Howard and Patricia Farber 私人收藏

王廣義

細節
Howard and Patricia Farber 私人收藏
王廣義
大批判 — 斯沃琪
油彩 畫布
2005年作
簽名︰王廣義 Wang Guang yi

來源
現藏者購自藝術家本人


藝評家呂澎評論王氏在作品上的藝術發展說,藝術家想藉毛澤東的形象去代表人類永恆的崇高價值,以及他憂心於時尚短暫易逝的病態。呂澎同時指出:「如果讓這種觀念出發的象徵走到極端,不免也會淪為陳舊而停滯的圖案,而藝術家終究要回來使用具象的人物肖像。」並又說這種特質貫穿王氏的作品,從《冰凍北大荒系列》、《新古典主義系列》、《理性系列》一直到以毛澤東為主題的作品,而後者也在1990年代的《大批判系列》理所當然地達到高峰。

他後來的畫作屬於中國當代藝術的「政治波普」類別,以獨特的風格結合共產黨文革時期的宣傳手法以及西方廣告的媚惑氛圍,令人聯想到美國波普的平面性風格。在《大批判系列-斯沃琪》(Lot 1030)這幅作品中,革命人物的戲劇性姿態、高對比、花俏的色調以及在構圖上使用醒目的企業商標,佐以黑底白字的「不要」,都建構出機靈又嘲諷的圖像。此系列成功地展現了藝術家利用視覺辭彙當作主要工具的極致手法,其基礎在於借用並錯置可識別的形式符號,使其在變幻且不可預期的新關係中產生新的意義和符號。這些圖像以滑稽的方式脫離自身的歷史情境,從作為象徵的觀念轉變為批判。流行藝術中被錯置的人物,叫喊口號,是種間接的關聯,與他們的身份、根源和目的背道而馳,王廣義畫出一個矛盾的成語圖像,那不僅是富含諷刺的抗議,更是連接思想世界和真實世界這兩個極端的一種想像。

王廣義利用了宣傳海報的視覺元素,串連起各式各樣的批評,表明他敏銳地意識到圖像的政治影響力,還有吸收意識形態立場的能力。最終,此系列不僅感嘆在遭消費主義淹沒的當代社會中,政治思想和理想主義的滑鐵盧頗具反諷意味,並斷言我們的視覺文化是建立在圖像的力量,而那種力量正在操縱和竄改我們整體的意識形態。通過「大批判」系列,王廣義提出多個值得深思的問題,反思現實和當代的消費社會,反思政治與藝術的關係。「大批判」系列讓王廣義成為中國前衛藝術的先鋒。
來源
Acquired directly from the artist by the present owner
注意事項
On occasion, Christie's has a direct financial interest in lots consigned for sale which may include guaranteeing a minimum price or making an advance to the consignor that is secured solely by consigned property. This is such a lot. This indicates both in cases where Christie's holds the financial interest on its own, and in cases where Christie's has financed all or a part of such interest through a third party. Such third parties generally benefit financially if a guaranteed lot is sold successfully and may incur a loss if the sale is not successful.

拍品專文

In commenting on the artistic development of Wang's works, the art critic Lu Peng stated, that the Mao image represented the artist's desire to express the eternal, high value of mankind through art, and his wariness towards the transient ills of fashion. At the same time, Lu noted that "when the symbols of such rationality are exercised to its extremes, they somehow transform into stale and stagnant objects, and artists will have to return to figurative pictures," and that this is the vein that runs throughout Wang's Frozen Northern Wasteland Series, Neo-Classicism Series to the Rationality Series to Mao, which finally culminated in a logical conclusion with the Great Criticism Series in the 1990s.

Wang's later paintings belonging to the category of Chinese contemporary art termed "Political Pop", uniquely combines the ideological powered Communist propaganda from the Cultural Revolution with the seductive allure of Western advertising, resulting in a style reminiscent of American Pop. In Great Criticism Series - Swatch (Lot 1030), the dramatic pose of the Revolutionary figures, the high contrast, garish palette, and that composition that is starkly labeled with the logo of a commercial enterprise, all construct an image of shrewd sarcasm with the placement of "No" in black and white. In a similar manner that Robert Rauschenberg rearranged combinations of readily-found images (Fig. 1), the series are a successful culmination of the primary tools in Wang's visual vocabulary that is based on appropriation and juxtapositions of recognizable symbols of forms, placed in dynamics and unexpected new relationships that feed new meanings and expressions. Through dissociating the images from their historical context in a comical way, the ideas they symbolize mutate into critiques and are erased by the new language they are expressed in. The result is an image of displaced propagandists trapped in the cult of Pop Art (Fig. 2), shouting slogans that are at odds with their identity, roots and purpose. Wang elicits a paradoxical pictorial idiom that is not only a satirical protest, but also a vision of connecting polarity between the ideological worlds and the real world.

He exploits the visual of propaganda posters and strings multifarious critiques with it, demonstrating his acute awareness of the political power of images in art and culture throughout history (Fig. 3) and their ability to naturalize or upset ideological positions. Ultimately, the series not only laments the ironic failure of political ideology and idealism in contemporary society inundated by consumerism, it also asserts that our visual culture is founded on the power of images that manipulate and interpolate our ideological affiliations. Through the series, Wang is committed to questioning the reality and contemporary consumer society, the relationship between politics and art, and posits him as a leader of the avant-garde.

更多來自 亞洲二十世紀及當代藝術

查看全部
查看全部