Second Look
Abstract Photographs by Xu Yong October 6 - 27, 2010 |
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Artist
will be
present in the Opening
Reception: October 6th, 2010 (Wednesday), 6pm - 8pm
The photographs of Xu Yong compel viewers to stop and have a second look, not quite sure how to respond to the fuzziness on them whether it is from their eyes or from the imageries. In his series of works, what Xu wants is more than causing visual anxiety. He aims at challenging the very core of the methodology of photography. By deliberately disturbing the recording of objects that are in focus through a barrier on the camera, he forces viewers to fathom and switch from the traditional concept of picture-taking to image-taking made possible by photography, from the concept of “what to see” in photography to “how to see” the images. By way of his confrontations with the tradition of photography, Xu produces a series of abstract imageries made up of blocks of vivid colours or patches of grey gradations similar to Chinese shun-mo paintings. What that appears familiar turns out to be awkwardly strange and what that looks curiously bizarre is in fact on subject that is ordinary. Xu Yong is no stranger to the Beijing art scene. He made his name twenty years ago photographing the Hutongs (old residential alleys or cul-de-sacs) of old Beijing. He was the founder of the Hutong-go-around Tour and the key figure and promoter behind the now world-renown Beijing 798 Art Zone. Second Look exhibition starts on October 6, 2010 and goes on for three weeks. Xu will exhibit the prime pieces of his challenges to traditional photography. For further information or interview with the artists, please contact us at dyiu@artbeatus.com.hk or call Dominic Chan at 2522-1138 or Josephine Hau at 2526-0818. “By increasing the barrier between the lens and the body of the camera, fuzzy colours of block-like images turn photography from the concept of “capturing pictures of the world” into “capturing images made possible by photography”, that is from the concept of “what to see” into “how to see”. Through this switch, photographic autonomy is elevated to an extreme where photography becomes the language of attributes of the lenses. Such approach obviously belongs to the tradition of modernistic art in pursuit of methodology. These images of Xu Yong are deliberately made to obstruct our view of the actual objects and to impose visual anxiety. Photography, then, becomes a method of “purely seeing”. Shu Yang on Photographic Production Beijing, April 12, 2010 Art Beatus Gallery is located on the ground floor of #50 Peel Street, Central (SOHO Area).
For further information or to interview with the artists, please either e-mail us at dyiu@artbeatus.com.hk or call at 2522-1138 / 2526-0818. Gallery Hours: Mon-Sat 11:30am to 7:30pm, Closed on Sundays & Public Holidays.
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