Magician Space
is delighted to present artist Li Jinghu’s solo exhibition,
“Companionship”, after a five-year hiatus since his last one in
Beijing.
For every one of us, all of our encounters, companionships, and
separations have been fair. As much as we’d like to be irrevocably
immersed in kindness and sweetness, we are also made aware of the
responsibility and burden that come with intimacy. Furthermore, fortune,
knowledge, class, health are often the quantifiable realities and
external factors that determine an individual’s turn of life, which do
not necessarily command the prospect of an individual’s emotional
commitment. The question that motivates Li Jinghu’s practice becomes,
“How do we transcend these setbacks in reality, so we sense the passion
and restrains of emotions, the pain and the unspeakable amid the
barriers between people?”
Li Jinghu’s practice has always attempted to dissolve those
existing meanings and flat narratives, while seeking out the common yet
at times, overlooked energy and desires in life. Like the mosaic tiles
amassed from the market of construction supplies, some vibrant in
colors, others plain and simple, some intricate and favorable, others
broken and scratched, are all made of quarts regardless of their
differences from each other. All of the tiles have been processed,
colored, set, and lined up, whose values have been actualized in a
standardized fashion regardless of whether its exterior matches its
internal intent or not. What concerns Li Jinghu is the juxtaposition of
the objects, and the ways in which companionship come together. And once
the social identities of an object are removed, how will it live and
survive?
When two pieces of entirely different tiles are placed next to each
other, hence a personal and independent relationship becomes apparent.
The piece of tile is no longer a member similar to the rest of the
group, but an existing piece reliant of the others. They are not glued
together seamlessly, instead, narrow crevasses are left between them.
One would not be able to determine what’s parting and approaching, which
resonates with the independent individuals engaged in an intimate
relationship, who at times embrace each other tightly, other times, part
their ways. Intimacy is often inseparable from reticence, which is
indeed its most honest trammel.
If two pieces of mosaic tiles, in each other’s company, project the
reality of the so-called intimate relationship, then bringing together
jewelry and metal radium disk would emulate the clash of love and desire
of adolescence. These cheap pieces of jewelry, often processed by
women, are placed over the metallic radium disks, processed by men, are
transformed into raindrops and fall into the water. They become one with
each other while creating a crescendo of ripples. Industrial materials
are often cold and rigid, but their encounter ignites passionate,
unhinged desires, as well as irrevocable parting. Before the feelings of
a previous love affair are fully fled, the raindrops from the next
encounter have already fallen, as parting and encountering often happen
simultaneously. Agreement and ethics often seem powerless and dismal in
the confrontation of the irrational love and loathing, and faced with
our desires and fate, we have to admit that the most wonderful things in
life are ultimately destined for transience and fragility.
Throughout the inescapable life of the mundane, hope, frustration, depravity, and the subtle yet tangible kindness are tangled together. This has turned Li Jinghu into a scrounger, who hopes to excavate those precious things amid the numbness of reality. Those found objects, be they the cheap pieces of jewelry, quartz, or the mosaic tiles, embody the individuals who are assigned with symbolic social attributes, as well as, analogies of himself. In the course of being selected, eliminated, and rediscovered, the invisible surfaces from the visible – this is the desperate fight against the cruelty of reality. While the unexpected encounters, companionships, struggles, and separations are not necessarily pleasant at all, as they often come with suffering and unspeakable feelings, but this precisely manifests the most truthful desire of living.
About the artist
Li Jinghu was born in 1972 in Dongguan, Guangdong, where he
currently lives and works. Li Jinghu works primarily with sculpture and
installation, which presents an intertwining and ongoing personal
‘historiography’ of a landscape in flux – his poetically charged work
frequently utilize humble materials gathered from his everyday locale.
His practice seeks to both capture and transcend the line between
collectivity and personal forms of expression, through a constant
rumination on society, industry, and capitalism.
Major solo exhibitions include: Companionship, Magician Space,
Beijing, CN (2019); The Reunion, Nodal Contemporary Art Space, Dongguan,
CN (2018); Encounters, Art Basel in Hong Kong, Hong Kong, CN (2017);
Time is Money, Magician Space, Beijing, CN (2014); Efficiency is Life,
Magician Space, Beijing, CN (2014); Snowman, Arrow Factory, Beijing, CN
(2010); Li Jinghu: Forest, Observation Society, Guangzhou, CN (2009).
Important group exhibitions include: Phantone, HOW Art Museum, Wenzhou, CN(2019); Night Tour of the Pearl River, Guangdong Museum of Art, Guangzhou, CN (2019); Front International: Cleveland Triennial for Contemporary Art, The Akron Museum, Akron, USA (2018); lei-pā, ST PAUL St Gallery, Auckland, NZ (2017); 1st Yinchuan Biennale, MOCA Yinchuan, Yinchuan, CN (2016); 11th Gwangju Biennial, Gwangju, KR (2016); A Beautiful Disorder, Cass Sculpture Foundation, West Sussex, UK (2016); There Has Been, And May Be Again, Pare Site, Hong Kong, CN (2016); This Future of Ours, Red Brick ArtMuseum, Beijing, CN (2016); Digging A Hole in China, OCAT, Shenzhen, CN (2016); Trace of Existence, UCCA, Beijing, CN (2016); THERMO MATTER, Shenzhen Art Museum, Shenzhen, CN (2015); The System of Objects, Minsheng Art Museum, Shanghai, CN (2015); Institution Production – Ecology Investigation of Contemporary Art of Young Guangzhou Artists, Guangdong Museum of Art, Guangzhou, CN (2015); You Can Only Think about Something if You Think of Something Else, Times Museum, Guangzhou, CN (2014); The 8th Shenzhen Sculpture Biennale, OCT Contemporary Art Terminal, Shenzhen, CN (2014); Positive Space, Times Museum, Guangzhou, CN (2014); ON | OFF: China’ s Young Artists in Concept and Practice, Ullens Center for Contemporary Art, UCCA, Beijing, CN (2013); PAINT (erly), BANK, Shanghai, CN (2013); Daily of concept: A Practice of Life – The 15th Shanghai Duolun Youth Art Exhibition, Duolun Museum of Modern Art, Shanghai, CN (2012); Pulse Reaction – An Exchange Project on Art Practice, Times Museum, Guangzhou, CN (2012).
About the exhibition
Curator: Leo Li Chen
Dates: Oct. 24 – Dec. 7, 2019
Opening: Oct 24, 16:00
Courtesy of the artist and Magician Space.