Beijing
New Directions: Tao Hui at Ullens Center for Contemporary Art
Young Chinese artist Tao Hui is a teller of absurd and disturbing tales; he is a fabulist and a social critic. Born in 1987, his childhood exposed him to the hardships of rural life and to Chinese folk traditions. After graduating from the Sichuan Fine Arts Institute with a BFA in oil painting, he turned to new media to represent the bizarre realities of life in modern China. His theatrical video installations juxtapose the everyday and the bizarre, creating surreal scenarios that defy expectations, refusing viewers the comfort of familiar narrative conventions.

New Directions: Tao Hui at UCCA Beijing; installation view. Courtesy of Ullens Center for Contemporary Art. Photo: Eric Powell.
The moving image was a Western import into China in the 19th century, and it was seized with enthusiasm and an entrepreneurial spirit. By the 1930s, Shanghai was the center of a thriving film industry, with glamorous movie stars rivaling those in Hollywood. After the establishment of the People’s Republic in 1949, film, like photography, became a vital instrument for Maoist propaganda. After Mao’s death, the reform and opening policies of Deng Xiaoping provided new influences, and in the mid-1980s, simultaneous with the rise of the ’85 “New Wave” artists, a group of idealistic filmmakers graduated from the Beijing Film Academy. Video in an art context was pioneered by artists such as Wang Jianwei, Hu Jieming, and Zhang Peili. An explosive mix of new technical knowledge, the discovery of Western artists (including Nam June Paik, Bill Viola, and Bruce Nauman), and the influx of popular culture from diverse sources provided an experimental laboratory for the Chinese avant-garde. Tao Hui is of a new generation for whom the language of video is entirely unremarkable, allowing him to explore the emotive possibilities of sound and create immersive experiences for audiences.











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