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Art League Houston

Press Release

 

Art League Houston Announces

 

For Immediate Release

Contact: Sarah Schellenberg

(713) 523-9530 or alh@artleaguehouston.org


Three exhibitions of contemporary photo-based work from China

Opening Receptions on Saturday, March 8, 2008, 6-8 PM

 

Houston, TX - Art League Houston is pleased to partner with FOTOFEST 2008 and its Twelfth International Biennial of Photography and Photo-Related Art in presenting three separate exhibitions of works by Chinese-based artists, Sun Guojuan, Chen Lingyang and Liu Lijie, March 8 - April 19, 2008.  The opening reception for Sun Guojuan: Sweetness Forever, Chen Lingyang: Twelve Flower Months and Liu Lijie: Another Episode will be at Art League Houston on Saturday, March 8, 2008, 6:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m.

 

These conceptual, mixed-media works are presented as part of Current Perspectives 1999-2008, a series of 11 one-person presentations by leading contemporary Chinese artists. Current Perspective exhibitions feature predominantly color, large-scale, staged, constructed, and digitally produced works by Chinese mainland-based artists, which address issues of religion, ethnicity, gender, urban transformation, identity, globalization, and the inter-relationship of contemporary art to classical Chinese art and history. 

 

FotoFest 2008 3 artists of Current Perspectives

 

left: Sun Guojuan   ::  top: Liu Lijie   ::   below: Chen Lingyang

 

Born to a Chinese mother and a North Korean father in 1959, Sun Guojuan is a photographer who lives and works in Kunming, China.  Sun Guojuan is a graduate of the Department of Library Studies at Yunnan University (1985).  Since graduating she has exhibited her work in major museums and galleries throughout China, as well as in Hong Kong, Korea, Sweden, France, and the United States.  Sun Guojuan's exhibition, Sweetness Forever presents a series of photographic diptychs portraying paired images of a female boudoir and its mirror of self-reflection.  Close-ups of dressing tables loaded with bottles of perfume and cosmetics are coupled with images of the artist's nude body caked in sugary white icing, a playful Mona Lisa smile creeping around the corners of her mouth. Sun Guojuan's work spoofs the modern virtuous woman conscripted as a good consumer, as dictated by China's economic market which encourages femininity through the consumption of beauty products, through such popular sayings as "As China gets richer, women should get prettier!"  Beneath these satires of contemporary gender norms imposed under the guise of capitalism, lies a critique of women's representations of themselves as depicted only through their own interior realms.

 

Chen Lingyang is a filmmaker, photographer and painter who was born in Zheijiang Province in 1975 and now works in Beijing, Paris and New York.  She studied at the Affiliated High School of the China Academy of Art, Hangzhou and the Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing, and has exhibited her work throughout Asia and Europe. Well established in the Chinese underground scene, Chen Lingyang unflinchingly explores the hidden world of Chinese femininity in her series Twelve Flower Months. Playing on the well-established metaphor of women as flowers (Neha Singh, UCSD Guardian), and based on traditional Chinese garden architecture, this series of 12 photographs combine flowers (narcissus, lotus, camellia, etc.), which in Chinese tradition represent the months of the year, and graphic images of Lingyang's body and her menstrual cycle.  Lingyang's works seek to empower women by challenging long accepted social and political submissiveness of Chinese woman, as well as age-old cultural taboos and fears surrounding the menses cycle.

 

Liu Lijie is a photographer and filmmaker who was born in Shenyang, China and now lives and works in Beijing.  Lijie graduated with a degree in finance and for a period of time worked in a bank.  In 1997 she began teaching herself photography.  In 2004 she left her job at the bank and entered the Photographic Institute of Beijing Film Academy to pursue her photography full-time.  Lijie's work has been exhibited in major venues that include the New York Photography Exhibition, the Pingyao International Photography Festival, the Australia Center for Photography, and Siegen Gallery in Germany, among others. The photographs in Lijie's Another Episode are staged mise en scenes in which the artist deals with memory, isolation and loneliness. For example, one photograph depicts a young woman sitting with an older man in a car parked in the middle of what appears to be a field.  She stares into space, as though disconnected from what will happen next, while the man leans in toward her, his hand placed suggestively on her shoulder.  Another image shows a woman alone in an operating or examination room, covered with sheet with only her face exposed, as though dead or under anesthesia.  Lijie says "The reality I live is perplexing and alluring. ... I am pessimistic from deep inside, for life is full of things that are beyond my control.  I would like to process the age, which I was in and I am in, into a scene [composed by a computer].... a small world imagined individually and not loyal to the original at all ... I hope to devote myself to presenting the simplest truth in an allegorical way."  

 

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About Art League Houston

Art League Houston is one of Houston's longest operating non-profit visual arts organizations and was the first alternative art space in Texas.  Founded in 1948 and incorporated as a non-profit organization in 1953, Art League Houston (ALH) was created to promote the public appreciation of and interest in the visual arts.  During the past 57 years, ALH has provided over 760 exhibitions to the Houston community, showcased the work of nearly 22,200 artists, and instructed over 35,000 students through the Art League School and Outreach Program. 

 

Our Mission

The mission of Art League Houston is to cultivate awareness, appreciation, and accessibility of contemporary visual art within the community for its cultural enrichment.  Art League Houston provides an opportunity for all members of the community to experience the contemporary visual arts.  We achieve our mission through exhibitions, education and outreach programs.

 

Art League Houston is supported principally by Houston Endowment Inc., the estate of William G. Daugherty, Kevin & Laurie Foxx, City of Houston through Houston Arts Alliance, John P. McGovern Foundation, Kat Gallagher & Michael Rudelson, Bridgeway Charitable Trust, Bruce & Jaleh Sallee, Art Colony Association/ Bayou City Art Festivals, and by Andrisin Abbey, Aubrey and Sylvia Farb Community Service Fund, Susan & Jack Apple, the Ann Bengtson Memorial Fund, Brad & Leslie Bucher, Cantoni, Marv & Billie Chasen, CITI Smith Barney, Darrell & Peggy Delahoussaye, Earth Exchange Corporation, Ray C. Fish Foundation, Hugh & Berthica Fitzsimons, Alice C. Boyd Gano, Nick & Candice Goodwin, James & Ann Harithas, Harris County Department of Education, International Bank of Commerce, Inversion Coffee House, Kinder Foundation, Leanna Laster, Mangini/ Lakhia/ Delahoussaye & Associates, P.A., Kenneth & Elena Marks, Mark & Gretchen Mazziotti, National MS Society Lone Star Chapter, Marilyn Oshman, Don & Crystal Owens, River Oaks Dental Arts, Michael G. Rudelson & Co., RWG Construction Management, Louisa Stude Sarofim, Tahamia Spain, Steve & Susie Streller/ Charter Custom Homes, Texas Art Supply, Top Drawer Lingerie, Kathryn Sherman Ttee, Vinson & Elkins L.L.P., The Woodlands Development Company, and all of our sponsors, members and volunteers.

 

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About FotoFest

FotoFest's mission is to promote the exchange of art and ideas through international programs and the presentation of photographic art.  FotoFest programs work globally and locally, bringing together an international vision of art and cross-cultural exchanges with a commitment to community involvement and the enrichment of Houston's cultural resources.

 

FOTOFEST 2008 focuses on one of the most compelling cultural, political and economic phenomena of the contemporary world- China and its transformation.

 

Politically and culturally, photography has been a key element in creating the public face of China since the late 19th century. From 1870 to 1920, photography helped explain and justify European economic exploitation and occupation of China.  From 1938-1980, photography became a major tool in Communist Party campaigns to win internal public support for its philosophy and programs, as well as the message it wanted to send to the outside world.  From 1980 - 2008, photography has become one of the major mediums of communication, public and private, about contemporary Chinese society. 

 

Departing from the most contemporary art programs on China, the FOTOFEST 2008 exhibitions and programs present both historical and contemporary work. The historical component features three exhibitions showing works from 1934-1975 that have never been shown outside of China.  Seven contemporary programs and exhibitions present work from the late 1980's until the present- classical and mixed media work by Chinese artists addressing a myriad of contemporary themes, with works by Chinese artists working in mainland China

 

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Art League Houston

1953 Montrose Blvd

Houston, TX 77006

p: (713) 523.950

f: (713) 523.4053

 

alh@artleaguehouston.org  ::  www.artleaguehouston.org

 

Art League Houston is a 501[c][3] nonprofit organization.