1. AW Asia Presents New Portraits by Contemporary Chinese Artist Qi Zhilong

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    artwork: AW Asia presents an exhibition of large paintings by contemporary Chinese artist Qi Zhilong. A series of portraits presented alongside a selection of original Chinese propaganda works from the Cultural Revolution period. Photo: Courtesy AW Asia.

    NEW YORK, NY.- AW Asia presents an exhibition of eight new large paintings by contemporary Chinese artist Qi Zhilong. The show includes a series of portraits presented alongside a selection of original Chinese propaganda works from the Cultural Revolution period. Positioned against examples of this original propaganda, Qi Zhilong’s latest “Female Liberation Army Women” imagery takes on a haunting historical resonance. This resonance is one of the hallmarks of much contemporary Chinese art created by Qi Zhilong’s generation of artists.

    artwork: Qi Zhilong - "Young Student" 2009 Oil on canvas, 162 x 130 cm. Photo: Courtesy AW Asia.Drawn from the iconography of the Cultural Revolution, Qi Zhilong’s bright portraits of female soldiers have earned him an international reputation, and he is widely recognized as one of the leading artists in China’s Political Pop movement. His works have reinvented and subverted the classic female soldier, transforming her from a revolutionary “plain Jane” into a contemporary symbol of Chinese beauty. Depicting young women as part pin-up model, part girl-next-door, these works explore the changing face of Chinese society through the female portrait.

    During the period of the Cultural Revolution (1966-1976) in China, young people played a crucial role in the spread of Mao Zedong’s political ideology. Whether as Red Guards or young pioneers, or simply as part of the youth of the day, all young people adopted the uniform of the People’s Liberation Army, a rather austere uniform intended to diminish social difference and put the sexes on an equal footing. There was also a particular emphasis on eradicating bourgeois tendencies, and concerns about one’s appearance. Women were pressured to deny their femininity to conform to the social norms of the day. Qi Zhilong’s elegant paintings have turned this notion upside down.

    Thirty years ago the ubiquitous image of Chairman Mao was almost the only portrait seen in the public realm. Nowadays China’s cities are filled with oversized billboards of attractive women advertising the latest luxuries and beauty products. With their bold and nostalgic blend of past and present, Qi Zhilong’s paintings reflect the changing role of women in Chinese media and culture today.

    Qi Zhilong has exhibited his works in museums such as the Galeri Nasional, Indonesia (2009), the Museum Bern, Switzerland (2005), and the Beijing Art Museum (1996). He has also exhibited at international galleries in China, Australia, Europe, and the United States. His works can be found in a number of private collections, including the renowned Sigg Collection of Chinese contemporary art.

    Over the past two decades, Chinese contemporary art has become a major presence in the international art world. The diversity of work by China's leading artists now commands the attention of curators, critics, collectors, scholars, and the global art community. Yet Chinese contemporary art merely builds on magnificent artistic traditions of China's 5,000-year-old culture. AW Asia's mission is to support and advance this significant field of art.

    Visit AW Asia in New York at : http://www.awasiany.com/


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