Cc Foundation & Art Centre was honored to present Superstition, Blessing, Modernism, a solo exhibition by artist Yilun Zhou from Nov.7th, 2020 to Mar.1st, 2021.
The exhibition, centered around three independent keywords “Superstition, Blessing, Modernism,” presented the artist’s new body of "magic" paintings that were accompanied by a set of sculptures. Semantically deconstructing and parodying iconography and re-interrogating modernist painting against the backdrop of the globalized consumerism, the artist hoped to bless the viewer with the "superstition" in his work.
The concept was originated from his personal experience: he got lucky at a poker game with friends one day. He attributed his good luck to a painting that he bought that day. In fact, Zhou is not religious, but he believes in the agency of specific patterns and symbols, even though have no practical functions, they are beautiful and magical, empowering people with spiritual consolation. Therefore, the protrusive subject in each painting is a rosary. The rosary blesses the event depicted in the backgrounds, be it two hugging lovers, or a pleasant vacation, or a comfortable office, or beautiful nature, or traditional art, or a modernist design, or folklore, or a religious ceremony.
In the exhibition, nine paintings were spaced apart, shaping a ring around five cylindrical sculptures in homage to Brancusi. Meanwhile, the ring compositions in the paintings were in response to the soaring sculptural columns in the center of the exhibition space to conjure an energetic ritualistic site of “superstition." Zhou’s paintings continued his idiosyncratic style, as well as his whimsical imagery to entice the viewer into his mysterious narratives. Skeleton, an ominous motif that frequently appears in Zhou’s recent paintings, was simply consumed as a decoration by the artist. It perhaps not only alludes to the inevitable tragic ending of Modernism, but also attests an earmark of Italian art historian Germano Celant(1940-2020)’s “un-expressionism” in contemporary art, where artists appropriate various signs and symbols but empty out their connotations.
Modernism is associated with utopian visions of human life as well as a belief in self-criticism and progress. Aesthetically, it rejects sculptural illusion or trompe l’oeil in painting. Flatness and abstraction came to be the dominant styles in the early 20th century in the West. Zhou revisited the devices of trompe l’oeil and integration of sculptural elements in painting by depicting balls and rosaries to create visual illusions. He sometimes attaches objects directly on the pictorial surface.
Zhou’s inquiry into the historical realm of Modernism is not without cynicism. His questioning of the problematic notion of “primitivism” is a perfect example. Modernists, such as Picasso, Gauguin and Matisse, “invented” primitivism to authorize themselves as connoisseurs of collecting and categorizing the marginalized, the minoritized, the forgotten, and the displaced people, cultures and folk arts with colonial attitudes. Zhou appropriates this notion, but instead of re-creating the inferior and the less refined experience of Others, he teaches himself to design and make vernacular, improvised, and eccentric DIY furniture/sculpture of his own to dismantle hierarchies of taste and to embrace visceral pleasure in creativity.
In our contemporary time, capitalism, technology and their resulted consumerism have metamorphosed art production and visual culture. In his 2008 essay The American Tornado, Celant reflected on the proliferation of art as decorative luxury products and the demise of critical art: “What was the result of thought and analysis, both critical and aesthetic, and offered insight into future developments has now become an object whose only positive outcome is an entity that can be discussed solely in terms of money…[This object is] organized in the expanded chain of museums, some of which pursued growth in order to become the Disneyland of the visual realm.”
In retrospect, humans need “superstition." Any existence that can be believed may be considered a “superstition." In 2020, a precarious year, "superstition" in the real world was of a greater significance. Zhou counted on art for auspices, in a hope to offer blessings to everyone and the whole world with his paintings that most closely resemble “magic."
Wish you all the best!