Galerie Urs Meile presents In Course of the Miraculous, the latest exhibition by Cheng Ran. The show features a series of the artist’s works made during his two-year residency at the artists’ residency program of the Rijksakademie van beeldende kunsten (Royal Academy of Visual Arts) in Amsterdam in the Netherlands. The artworks are in a variety of media including texts, video works and installations. The title is derived from Dutch artist Bas Jan Ader’s famous performance piece In Search of the Miraculous from the 1970s, and the exhibition considers the coexistence of real and false to open up an “exploration” of this thematic practice. For the artist, it is also a bold, experimental attempt to “explore” the language of film and the aesthetics of the shot. Cheng Ran’s main medium is video, and he has often parodied, distorted and reinterpreted the classical, but more recently his interests have extended to other media such as objets trouvés and sound performances.
This exhibition also features an “unfinished” film without narratives, showing the artist’s preparations, the right and wrong assumptions made while shooting the film, and the changes that happened along the way in his ideas and practice. As the central part of the ongoing 9-Hour Film project (working title), Storyboard Film borrows the cinematic technique of storyboarding: showing planned and altered shots, combined with the sound of murmuring. Together they form an abstract film of non-existent images, and from this perspective, Storyboard Film is like a secret channel drawing the audience into imagining a film,and its enormous and rich narrative possibilities. Cheng Ran has also specially designed a viewing space that evokes a cinematic feeling, which importantly allows him an exploration of time, space and the relationship with the audience. 9-Hour Film project (working title) is supported by K11 Art Foundation, and when the film is finished, it will premiere in Europe at the Istanbul Biennial in September 2015.
A sailboat installation that was exhibited at the RijksakademieOPEN in Amsterdam, the Netherlands in December 2014 will get its first showing in Beijing. It has been rebuilt under specially arranged film lighting. Also, constituting fragmentary clues about this mysterious film, large-format light box photography, numerous objets trouvés, manuscripts and props are displayed as well.
The large four-screen video Before Falling Asleep (2013, super 16 mm film transferred to single channel HD video, color/sound, Part 1: 5’55’’; Part 2: 4’11’’; Part 3: 4’; Part 4: 4’) was shot and produced in the Netherlands. This artwork was inspired by classic bedtime fairytales; the four parts were adapted from Aesop’s fables and Ivan Krylov’s stories of the same title. By anthropomorphizing the characters in the tales, conversations between the pond and the river, two pigeons, the fire and the tree, as well as the butterfly and the flower, touch on progress and stagnation, truth or lies, choosing or missing, and being faraway or at home. Cheng Ran is most interested in the narrative technique of using objects as metaphors,or using objects to express an aspiration, and the boundary between dreams and reality that cannot be expressed, as well as the overlap between the ideas in the stories and that state of trance occurring moments before falling asleep, when a child is between real life and dreamland. In terms of the design of the space, the collage carpet pieces with text provide more possibilities and metaphors on the space, story and language: it echoes from afar his solo exhibition of the same name, The Last Generation, which was based on a novel and presented at Galerie Urs Meile Beijing in 2013.
During the opening, the artist will also present an outdoor live music performance. To accompany the exhibition, the gallery will produce a publication that documents the objets trouvés, sketches and prints,and will be co-designed by independent designer Mei Shuzhi.
About the exhibition
Duration: Apr 25, 2015 - Jul 12, 2015
Opening: Apr 25, 2015, 16:00, Saturday
Venue: Galerie Urs Meile
Courtesy of the artist and Galerie Urs Meile, for further information please visit www.galerieursmeile.com.