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Negative Reading | Reading Negatives

Inside the White Cube

Qin Yifeng

Negative Reading | Reading Negatives

4 September – 16 November 2019

Dates

4 September – 16 November 2019

Location

White Cube Hong Kong

50 Connaught Road Central
Hong Kong

During the creative process, Qin subjectively connects with nature, working in all weather conditions and waiting for the perfect natural light to take his image.

Both artist and scholar, Qin is a collector of Ming dynasty furniture. During his decades of collecting, it is the damaged pieces of furniture that have most passionately interested him, for he sees them as a metaphor for the changes in Chinese traditional values. Using his antique wooden furniture as subject, he creates negative images using a large-format camera.

Born in 1961 and raised in Shanghai where he continues to live and work, Qin mastered calligraphy as a child, the essence of which – its spiritual dimension and formal aesthetic – has deeply influenced his entire artistic practice including the photographs in this exhibition. Equally, his early investigations as an abstract painter are evident in the inherent flatness of the negative film that he uses to make these recent images. In 1992, Qin established a painting style called ‘Xian Chang’ (field of lines), in which the cube, constructed of lines, was used as a basis to explore compositions of lines and planes, the relationship between two and three dimensions and the overlapping and ‘twisting’ of painterly space. Since abandoning the cube, he has gradually developed a style of ‘pureness’, with a more solemn and tranquil use of colour in pared down images that are concerned with formal aesthetics, spatial relationships and atmosphere.

Continuing themes addressed in his 2017 solo show at the Yuz Museum in Shanghai, Qin’s new works depict three-dimensional objects using two-dimensional means to develop his own particular artistic language. Through a creative deconstruction of the photographic negative – and its black/white reversal – he attempts to achieve the effect he terms ‘bringing life out of death’. In his images, lines create space, segmenting the flat surface of the picture and the space between background and subject is compressed.

During the creative process, Qin subjectively connects with nature, working in all weather conditions and waiting for the perfect natural light to take his image. Each work is subsequently named according to the exact time it was captured and the weather conditions at that particular moment. In this way, his works are effected by the laws of nature, just as the damaged furniture they depict is imbued with the variable natural properties of its centuries-old wood. For Qin, the right moment to capture an image occurs when the object being photographed can ‘swallow its shadow’, creating an eclipse of shadow and object so that the object alone remains visible.

The design, structure and contours of Ming dynasty furniture has historically been regarded as the embodiment of its inner spirit. Qin’s images not only retain the original lines and structures of the damaged furniture, but also record the traces of damage and the wood’s particular grain - the surface signs of the object’s past use or abuse and of its natural weathering. This history is acknowledged in his pictures, which are conceived as a kind of historical index, each an hommage to their subject’s unknown makers. While suggesting destruction or decay, however, they also construct a historical space which exists in marked contrast to the hard, noisy space of their wider art world context.

Although Qin uses a camera to make images, he does not make traditional ‘photographs’. His pictures eliminate perspective and depth, compressing together the near and the distant into the same grey flat surface. Using a Sinar P2 monorail studio camera and a Schneider lens as his tools, he is able to resist unnecessary photographic effects with a technology that, conversely, works against technology, allowing abstract and figurative to coalesce. Unlike a paintbrush, the monorail studio camera banishes any chance effects, offering Qin greater control over the image than his previous painting practice allowed and a continuing and profound engagement with the poetry of juxtapositions.

Biography

Qin Yifeng was born in 1961 in Qinghai, China, and moved to Shanghai with his parents the following year. He graduated from Shanghai Arts and Crafts College in 1983 and then continued his education at the College of Fine Arts, Shanghai University, completing his studies in 1989. He currently holds a post as Associate Professor at Shanghai University.

Solo exhibitions include ‘Qin Yifeng’s Works’, Yuz Museum, Shanghai (2017); Mind Set Art Center, Taipei (2016); C-Space, Beijing (2014); Eastlink Gallery, Shanghai (2005); Chinese Contemporary Gallery, London (1999); Red Gate Gallery, Beijing (1997); and his first solo exhibition at the College of Fine Arts, Shanghai University (1994).

Selected group exhibitions include the 1st Guangzhou Image Triennial, Guangdong Museum of Art, China (2017); White Cube Mason’s Yard, London (2016); Beijing Tokyo Art Project, Beijing (2003); Vienna Künstlerhaus (2002); Shanghai Art Museum (2001); Walsh Gallery, Chicago, Illinois (2000); ‘China/Avant-Garde Exhibition’, National Art Museum of China, Beijing (1989); and ‘Exhibition of Modern Art by Six Artists’, Fudan University, Shanghai (1985).

Qin was awarded the gold medal in the landscape design competition at the 10th National Art Exhibition, hosted by the National Art Museum of China in 2004.

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