DE SARTHE presents Dong Jinling’s first solo exhibition with the gallery titled ‘The Purity of a Horse’ in Beijing. The exhibition features a completely new body of work by the artist and will run through May 6th, 2018.
In this exhibition Dong Jinling expands and reflects on the notion of “Purity.” She discusses the delicate relationship and the strong emotional bond that exists between humans and animals. The artist has chosen horses as a focal point as they have had a close relationship to humans since ancient times. To Dong Jinling, horses represent the human spirit. She portrays the horse as a creature that captures simplicity and complexity at the same time. Through the art works in this exhibition, Dong Jinling hopes to construct an bridge between reality and the spiritual world.
Standing in the main hall on the first floor, ‘Purity of a Horse’ is also the name of a horse-shaped installation carved from white marble. Here, the body of the horse is dismembered into two parts and is missing its head. In her artist’s statement Dong Jinling notes, on January 3rd 1889, at the square in front of Turing’s house, German poet and philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche witnessed the abuse of a horse by its driver and when he walked over to the horse, he started crying while holding its neck. This scenario coincides exactly with a dream from Raskolnikov, a main character in the novel ‘Crime and Punishment’ written by Fyodor Dostoyevsky in 1866. The two instances, as well as this artwork, symbolize an intangible tension that originates from powerful sympathies. It references the conflicts between morality and immorality and our limited range of understanding.
‘Purity’ often implies that an individual is of virtuous thoughts, speech, and action. ‘Purity’ can also suggest cleanliness. To Dong Jinling, the word implies a self-restrain and self-censorship that is rooted in morality. The single channel video titled ‘Purity’ records a horse that is led by a person holding a rope. They stand and struggle on a boundless frozen river. From the video, you can only see part of the horse’s body: its legs, its tail, and some animal hearts strewn on the ground. With sound effects customized by independent musician Zhang Jianfeng, these shocking and horrifying images create an even heavier atmosphere. Meanwhile, this atmosphere echoes a solemn sense of ritual that is brought through by Dong Jinling’s oil painting ‘Honor’ and installation work ‘Flag.’
‘The Survivor’s Notes’ is a combination of two photographs, the contents of which came from the artist’s personal experience in the past. It goes back to the year when Dong left home to this region permeated with the smell of fear and terror. At the time people saw painful things happening everywhere in the heavily guarded city. Due to a complex set of reasons, horrifying and alarming incidents took over the entire place. As a common resident, Dong Jinling had to worry about petrol bombs breaking her windows at any moment. At that time, she used photography to record what looked like a grey and gloomy sky that was almost static. Dong peeled the skins from her both palms then pasted to the photo where the sky were. In the photos, the flowing patterns of the sky are clearly visible and viewers can sense they retain the turmoil of emotions at the time. There was no honor in the war, only survivors.About the artist
Dong Jinling, born in 1986, Jiangsu province, China. She graduated with a Bachelor degree, major in Art History, from Yunnan University. She currently lives and works in Beijing. Her recent solo exhibitions include: GRIEF, Thrudesign, Beijing, China (2017); My Foster Child - Darkness, Moshang Experiment, Beijing, China (2017). Selected group exhibitions include: Performance Art as Space Intervention / Documentaries of Chinese Performance Art, MEDO ART, Vienna, Austria (2017); The First Meixi International Culture and Art Festival, HE Art Museum, Changsha, China (2017); Exhibition of the Fifth UP-ON International Live Art Festival, A4 Art Museum, Chengdu, China (2017); A SEPARATION, curated by Zhu Zhu, Yang Gallery, Beijing, China (2017); NIPAF (Nippon International Performance Art Festival) Asia WS – IN: ACT 2016, Ho Chi Minh, Vietnam (2016); BEYOND ACTION, Kylin Center of Contemporary Art, Beijing, China (2016); The First Art Media Nomination Exhibition, Sichuan Fine Art Institute, Chongqing, China (2016); Inward Gazes-Four Artists in Performance, Macao Museum, Macao, China (2015).
About the exhibition
Duration: 17 March – 6 May, 2018
Venue: de Sarthe Gallery
Location: 328-D, Caochangdi, Chaoyang District, 100015 Beijing, China
Courtesy of the artist and de Sarthe Gallery, for further information please visit www.desarthe.com or contact Catherine Huang | catherine@desarthe.com | +86 13671043227.