Lot 824
  • 824

Ding Yi

Estimate
600,000 - 700,000 HKD
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Description

  • Ding Yi
  • Appearance of Crosses 90-6
  • acrylic on canvas
Signed in Pinyin and Chinese, titled in Chinese and dated 1990 on the reverse, framed

Provenance

Hanart TZ Gallery, Hong Kong

Exhibited

China, Hong Kong Arts Centre; Australia, Sydney, Sydney Museum of Contemporary Art; Australia, Melbourne, Melbourne Arts Festival; Canada, Vancouver, Vancouver Art Gallery; USA, Eugene, University of Oregon Art Museum; USA, Fort Wayne, Fort Wayne Museum of Art; USA, Kansas, Salina Art Center; USA, Chicago, Chicago Cultural Center; USA, California, San Jose Museum of Art, China's New Art, Post-89, 1993-1997, p. 225
France, Paris, Passage de Retz, Next Generation Art Contemporain D'Asie, 27 June - 9 September, 2001
Portugal, Lisbon, Culturgest, Galleries 1 and 2, Contemporary Chinese Art, Subversion and Poetry, 2003, p. 31

Literature


Condition

Minor abrasion on the four corners; spots of minor paint loss in the middle of the left edge and in the middle and bottom of the right edge, otherwise the work is in good condition.
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Catalogue Note

DING YI

Viewed at close range, Ding Yi's Appearance of Crosses series reveals a remarkable regularity of hand-painted strokes; an astonishing degree of control and a full spectrum of colour decisions have been made in minute detail that resolve into pattern and texture at any further distance. At medium range, one's eye is led to the complicated patterning of individual sectors across the extensive field of the image, which defies bodily dimensions, the artist's no less than the viewer's; one seeks in vain what rules might exist and the logic of choices expressed as pattern. At a greater distance, however, the eye takes in the whole of the composition and builds the relationships between constituent parts that allow the central cross to emerge, the colours darting left and right, up and down and diagonally like a massive traffic intersection of lights and colours in unstoppable fast-forward motion. This is the speed, intensity and dynamism of contemporaneity, painstakingly analyzed one calm stroke at a time.

In revealing the cacophonous complexity of the contemporary urban experience, the artist forges an order amidst the chaos. And this is perhaps what is most inspiring: Ding Yi's unique practice offers a model for negotiating our own experience of the present.

Ding Yi is unusual among contemporary Chinese artists in his rigorous pursuit of what appears on the surface to be a practice of pure geometric abstraction. But while the surfaces of his work are indeed abstract – and dazzling in their complicated patterns and effects – a deeper engagement with his painting draws the viewer to contemplate the reductive vocabulary of the artist's mark making and its physical and temporal significance. The creation of the crosses series began in 1988, a period in which he describes Chinese contemporary art as "experiencing the same transition as the whole of China. Both were withstanding the shock from and the effect of Western culture on traditional Chinese thinking. I had to free myself from traditional cultural burden and the initial modern painterly impact of the West. Back to the basics and start from scratch, I remember making my first art work out of the primary colour of red, yellow and blue. Choosing crosses was exactly because of its broad symbolism. In my career, crosses have been used to denote the precise position during every colouring process. It is merely a printing industry's technical vocabulary and symbol, which lacks any room for imagination. I had to filter all practicality, to allow a painting to show her intrinsic form as its spirit is like. The 'cross' has a preoccupied meaning in the human subconscious, and by default it connects logic with the symbolic experience of everyday lives. However, the 'cross' is merely a meaningless symbol to me. Their arrangement in a particular order according to similar painterly brushstroke means that symbols are used to compress the usual meaning from symbolic experience. While the closely juxtaposed crosses explore the shallow visual and special relationship in a logical way; the colourful lines and other fragmentary shapes are distributed on the plane of the canvas to engage the space and the depth in an arbitrary abundance. The essences of art are not a mere superficial presentation of symbols, but a creation of an epical and spiritual power through the deconstruction of symbols into their component brushstrokes."