Curator: Cui Cancan
Opening: 14:00-19:00 June 6(Sat), 2015
Duration: June 6–September 6, 2015
Venues: Tang Contemporary Art and Galleria
Continua
Ai Weiwei’s solo exhibition of the same name – “AI
WEIWEI” – will be on display at Tang Contemporary Art and Galleria Continua
from June 6 –September 6, 2015. With over 400 years of history, the Wang
Family Ancestral Hall will pass through two gallery spaces, old home’s
structure and that of the galleries’ will become one. Ai Weiwei is one of the
world's most important artist. This is his first solo exhibition in China
including all new artwork, with Cui Cancan assuming the role of curator.
Built in the Ming Dynasty, the Wang Family Ancestral
Hall is originally from Xiaoqi Village of Wuyuan County, Jiangxi Province.
Intended for worship, the hall was built to worship the Wang family ancestor,
Wang Hua. In addition to worship, Wang family descendants used this space to
hold ceremonies, discuss public affairs, and discipline those who violated
family rules. The hall was like a network node for the Wang family, knitting
the family’s organizational structure, and maintaining the lineage’s
stability and order.
This traditional Chinese architectural structure was
built primarily of wood –its columns and beams are connected by tendons. Five
kaijian(standard width of a room in an old-style house, about 3.3 meters) by
four jinshen (word used to describe depth or length of a house) in size, its
tall, central hall is built with the finest of materials. For several hundred
years after the hall was built, clan members continuously repaired and
alteredit as a way of showing off the family’s wealth and identity. Behind the
hall’s architectural form and scale, exists the traditional ethics and order
as instilled by respect for elders before youth, and men before women.
However, following the revolution, imperialism came
to an end and the social ethical system collapsed – the Wang Family’s
Ancestral Hall ceased to have any prosperity. After going through Land
Reforms and the Campaign Against Old Fours, three of the hall’s four
courtyards were fully demolished, leaving only the central hall.
Simultaneously, the house where generations of Wang family members once lived
became available for public use. Though it belonged to the village, no one
took responsibility for its repair, leading to its ultimate decline.
It was in 2000 that a new market system was
developed, and the already collapsed Wang Ancestral Hall was turned into a
product to be sold on the ancient antiquities market. In 2013, the Xiaoqi
Village Committee auctioned off the hall, and Zhu Caichang, a businessman
from Dongyang, Zhejiang Provence, purchased it. The hall left Xiaoqi and was
moved to Dongyang, where it was repaired and rebuilt. Two years later, Ai
Weiwei purchased the hall, becoming its new owner.
Ai Weiwei has created a huge body of artwork that is
inseparable from his will or vision. For this exhibition, he has split the
hall into 1500 components to be moved to Beijing, where it will be installed
– standing between the walls of two gallery spaces, it will create a new
space. The changing owners, locations and events that this Wang Family
Ancestral Hall has passed through, have continuously added experience and a
multitude of features to its identity, creating a dramatic scene.
The original spaces in which Tang Contemporary Art
and Galleria Continua are housed – the old 798 government electronics factory
built with Soviet aid and East German design – are constructed of another
consciousness. As the Wang Family Ancestral Hall stands silently in this
space, a magical combination takes form – one space responding to another
space, one point in history responding to another point in history. As the
office area of Tang Contemporary Art and the architecture of the old house
overlap, the audience is able to approach the hall’s columns, beams and other
components, capturing a glimpse of this ancient building’s residual memory.
As the Wang Family Ancestral Home stands as an
individual architecture, it escapes its fate as being forgotten. It is
different from many “ruins” and artifacts in that it doesn't emit a stale
smell like the others. In response to the space that spans 400 years, Ai
Weiwei reinterprets antiquities that have already changed, creating an
entirely new context at the intersection of architecture and art.
The Wang Family Ancestral Hall has changed once
again – becoming a space that people can enjoy, moreover breathe together –
one that is both old and new.
|
http://www.tangcontemporary.com/en-zl_gyzl.asp?id=91
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario