White Cube opens a solo exhibition of new works by Liu Wei in Florida

TEXT:CAFA ART INFO    DATE: 2022.11.24

02 Exhibition view of Liu Wei, White Cube, West Palm Beach (23 November 2022–5 January 2023). © Liu Wei. Courtesy White Cube..jpgExhibition view of Liu Wei, White Cube, West Palm Beach (23 November 2022–5 January 2023). © Liu Wei. Courtesy White Cube.

White Cube presents an exhibition of new works by Liu Wei at West Palm Beach. Featuring paintings and large-scale sculptures, the selection traces Liu's considered response to the accelerated dynamics of the contemporary urban environment and addresses the relationship between humans, nature and machines.

A group of paintings produced during the past year continues the artist's celebrated 'Purple Air' series, which he began in 2006. In these works, Liu focuses on the possibilities offered by digital processes and how these can be translated and adapted to the medium of painting, expanding his long-term use of digital software to deconstruct, reorganise and reinterpret an image.

04 Exhibition view of Liu Wei, White Cube, West Palm Beach (23 November 2022–5 January 2023). © Liu Wei. Courtesy White Cube..jpg

03 Exhibition view of Liu Wei, White Cube, West Palm Beach (23 November 2022–5 January 2023). © Liu Wei. Courtesy White Cube..jpgExhibition view of Liu Wei, White Cube, West Palm Beach (23 November 2022–5 January 2023). © Liu Wei. Courtesy White Cube.

Formulated as a perception rather than a representation of that which surrounds us, Liu aims 'to present the hidden parts of reality', drawing connections between painting and architecture, the organic and the mechanical and digital and physical modes of construction. Executed in oil on canvas, these paintings begin with a digital image which is enlarged and then meticulously transcribed into pixels and fine vertical lines, resulting in a chromatic neon haze that both veils and reveals the pictorial subject. Reflecting on the rapid expansion and digital progression of China's urban landscape, familiar to him from childhood, Liu's paintings project an imaginary, interstitial space – one that exists between ideas and reality, between buildings, digital projections, and the sublime surface of the screen.

Liu Wei, Panorama NO. 10, 2020. Oil on canvas, 223.5 x 223.5 cm..jpgLiu Wei, Panorama NO. 10, 2020. Oil on canvas, 223.5 x 223.5 cm. © Liu Wei. Courtesy White Cube.

The use of accumulated lines in Liu's paintings create a dissolute image which, in these paintings, results in forms that evoke futuristic towers, graphic screens, and circular, glowing neon suns or moons. Abstracted under a haze of simulated colour, the lines effect a compression and extension of pictorial depth which, as the artist has remarked, 're-establishes a unique visual structure and an order of gaze'. Likening his pictorial language to the 'disorder of data' on an electronic screen as well as to collage, Liu makes parallels between the layering process of his paintings and the constructive growth of the contemporary city: 'A collage itself is the main way of composing modern cities, architectures and buildings. It is no longer a painting concept in the traditional sense, but is about construction, composition and movement between city and architecture, architecture and painting, painting and personal experience, where different interfaces, or images or screens, are created, reflecting a speed and a real landscape of modern living.'

Liu Wei, Microworld NO. 8, 2022. Aluminium, wood and steel, 179 x 124 x 137 cm..jpgLiu Wei, Microworld NO. 8, 2022. Aluminium, wood and steel, 179 x 124 x 137 cm. © Liu Wei. Courtesy White Cube.

Liu Wei, Microworld NO. 9, 2022. Aluminium, wood and steel, 154 x 118 x 93 cm..jpg

Liu Wei, Microworld NO. 9, 2022. Aluminium, wood and steel, 154 x 118 x 93 cm. © Liu Wei. Courtesy White Cube.

This landscape of modern living is equally reflected in Microworld NO.7, 8 and 9 (all 2022), three sculptures from the 'Microworld' series which Liu began in 2018. Continuing his focus on the relationship between humans, nature and machines, the sculptures are executed in polished sheet aluminium, their smooth, amalgamated, composite forms eliding the organic, sensual and bodily form with the technological, mechanical and futuristic structure. Grounded in the philosophy of the French philosopher, anthropologist and sociologist Bruno Latour, particularly his investigations into the relationship between humans and nature, the 'Microworld' sculptures point to our need to make associations between the organic and the manmade, while at the same time, harness a malleable response to new technology and to the possibilities it might engender. Embodying a different kind of privileged gaze, Liu's baroque forms evolve from the idea of the smallest units of matter; the fundamental components of our world, as seen through the most advanced scientific and optical tools. Exploring notions of the visible and invisible in our current state of technological advancement, they are both expanding and self-completing, combining sheets with solid forms and arcs and folds with weighty spheres. Hard-edged in their material properties yet presenting as soft undulating forms, Liu's sculptures contain, describe and enfold space, their reflective skin-like surfaces asserting a physicality resonant of the body.

The minute building blocks for a new world here enlarged and made monumental, the 'Microworld' sculptures highlight the increasingly manipulated relationship between humans and nature, and our determined quest for technological progress. 'We can't truly experience this micro-world, but somehow we are, unquestioningly, convinced of its existence', Liu has said. Responsive to the globalisation and cultural homogenisation of today's world, Liu's work provokes and entices, posing powerful questions which can be thought and felt through their sensory materiality and elusive form, allowing us, as the artist suggests, to 'see through the prism of feelings'.


About the exhibition

01 Exhibition view of Liu Wei, White Cube, West Palm Beach (23 November 2022–5 January 2023). © Liu Wei. Courtesy White Cube..jpg

Exhibition view of Liu Wei, White Cube, West Palm Beach (23 November 2022–5 January 2023). © Liu Wei. Courtesy White Cube.

Dates: 23 November 2022 – 5 January 2023
Venue: White Cube West Palm Beach

Press release courtesy White Cube.