Shutterfly.com
 
images by wayne guangyi
published 15 june 2007
originally published by retort magazine
 
portrait of the artist | volume 1 number 3
 
"Truth and reality in art do not arise until you no longer understand what you are doing and are capable of, but, nevertheless, sense a power that grows in proportion to your resistance." -Henri Matisse
 
published since April 2007 | Portrait of the Artist showcases the work of compelling contemporary visualists.
 
 

Classified in China under the genre of Political Pop, Wang Guangyi’s paintings combine the ideological power of Communist propaganda with the seductive allure of advertising. Juxtaposing revolutionary images with consumer logos, Wang’s canvases provocate with their duplicitous messages, highlighting the conflict between China’s political past and commercialized present. Stylistically merging the government-enforced aesthetic of Agitprop with the kitsch sensibility of American pop, Wang’s work adopts the Cold War language of the '60s to ironically examine the contemporary polemics of globalization.


Through his critique, Wang’s paintings weave intricate narratives, implicating the role of the artist as an active participant (both as subjugator and subservient) in economic and social policy. Wang treads a very delicate line between moral dictum and capitalist endorsement; the interpretation of his paintings alternates with the subjectivity of context. Amalgamating, confusing, and blurring opposing ideological beliefs, Wang’s billboard-sized canvases readily sell out national valor, while simultaneously devaluing status symbol luxury for the proletariat cause.

 
 
 

 
 
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