Qiu Shihua o.T., 1986 Privatbesitz, courtesy m Bochum Kunstvermittlung © Qiu Shihua, Foto: Eric Jobs.

Qiu Shihua o.T., 2001 Sammlung Sigg © Qiu Shihua, Foto: Sammlung Sigg.

Qiu Shihua's White Fields as Trompe l'Oeil

Hamburger Bahnhof
Invalidenstrasse 50-51
+ 0 30 39783411
Berlin
Qiu Shihua
White Field

April 26-August 5, 2012

At first glance, Qiu Shihua’s works appear as monochrome, almost completely white canvases. However, on closer inspection, expansive landscapes emerge from their painterly surfaces, which, depending on the way you look at them, gradually blossom with detail, or recede again from view. The complex visibility of the images can only be truly grasped through closer scrutiny. Beyond the mere act of seeing, an appreciation of these canvases requires the "thinking eye," a mode of seeing consistently demanded by relatively few contemporary artists working today.

With the white landscapes the artist questions the concept of visibility in painting. The artist has his motifs appear and disappear, as they lie captured in and under thin, white layers of paint and translucent glazes. The way Qiu repeatedly revisits the "white landscape" as a picture type and his tireless occupation with the nuances of its changeability are signs of Taoist thinking and a Taoist approach to work. This outlook is characterized by the process of repetition, whereby presence and absence, the full and the void, depiction and withdrawal are brought into constant interplay with each other. The depiction of a landscape forms one pole in this process, while the simultaneous effacement of the same forms the other. Seeing becomes an interplay of perception. In this, associations can be drawn with the shan shui (or ‘mountain-water’) tradition of Chinese painting, which required similar modes of seeing in a shifting process between the opposite poles of emptiness and fullness of the depicted subject.

 

At the same time though, Qiu Shihua’s style of contemporary painting has been largely informed by an intense study of Western art. In Qui’s works, the viewer gazes into expansive, deserted plains – isolated and devoid of people. These pale compositions are teeming with atmospheric effects: contours blur as if shrouded in fog, while in other areas of the canvas the transparent opaques are suggestive of a profusion of forms. By opening themselves up to the pictures, viewers allow their attention to also be drawn to their own sense of perception and their own surroundings. This way of experiencing the art bears a relation to European Romanticism, in which a close link is forged between viewer and landscape. The repeated use of the colour white in Qiu’s painting forms a further essential parameter for artistic contemplation. In this, Qiu stands in the tradition of a form of abstract painting by post-war artists in the West who experimented extensively with the colour white and whose works gave new expression to the importance of painterly reduction for the medium of painting.

Qiu Shihua’s white landscapes thus hover between these poles of Western attitudes to abstraction and reduction on the one hand, and East Asian concepts of repetition and emptiness on the other. His works are an expression of a sustained ambivalence, which manifests itself in the ‘white landscapes’ as ceaseless changeability of subject and perception.

Qiu Shihua was born in 1940 in Zizhong, Sichuan Province, China. He studied painting at the Xi’an Academy of Fine Arts, where his training was primarily in traditional Chinese painting. At the end of his time as a student he created works in a socialist-realist vein that drew from Soviet models. He completed his training in 1962 and worked through the Cultural Revolution up to 1984 as a painter of posters for a cinema in Tongchuan. Exhibitions and travels in and around Europe were important in the development of his oeuvre, as was his turning to Taoism.Qiu Shihua lives and works in Beijing and Shenzhen, China.As part of a collaboration between the Nationalgalerie – Staatliche Museen zu Berlin and the Museum Pfalzgalerie Kaiserslautern, an expanded version of the exhibition is due to go on show in Kaiserlautern in autumn 2012.

Qiu Shihua o.T., 2006 Courtesy Galerie Luis Campaña, Berlin © Qiu Shihua, Foto: Jens Ziehe.

Qiu Shihua o.T., 2005 Privatbesitz, courtesy m Bochum Kunstvermittlung © Qiu Shihua, Foto: Eric Jobs.

Qiu Shihua o.T., 1991/92 Privatbesitz, courtesy m Bochum Kunstvermittlung © Qiu Shihua, Foto: Eric Jobs.

Qiu Shihua, untitled, 2008, oil on canvas, 210 x 300 cm.

Qiu Shihua, untitled, 2008, oil on canvas, 150 x 308 cm.

Qiu Shihua – Encountering the Monochromatic Image as an Epiphany

Qiu Shihua, untitled, 2007, oil on canvas, 150 x 290 cm.

Qiu Shihua, untitled, 2002, oil on canvas, 92.5 x 178 cm.

Qiu Shihua, untitled, 2007, oil on canvas, 128 x 238 cm.

Qiu Shihua, untitled, 2001, oil on canvas, 50 x 92 cm.

Qiu Shihua, untitled, 2004, oil on canvas, 90.5 x 152.5 cm.

Qiu Shihua, untitled, 2003, oil on canvas, 89.5 x 141 cm.

Qiu Shihua, untitled, 2002, oil on canvas, 86 x 127 cm.

 

Galerie Urs Meile
Rosenberghöhe 4
+41 41 420 33 18
Lucerne
Qui Shihua – New Works
September 4-October 24, 2009

By MAX WECHSLER

Inscribed within the ambivalence of shape and non-shape, image and non-image, Qiu Shihua's (*1940) paintings are literally sensations beyond rational understanding. They reveal themselves solely in the imminent contemplation of a vast perceptual field which persistently eludes conceptual comprehension. At first glance, notwithstanding the figurative elements they contain, these paintings radiate mainly a "void", which Western beholders immediately assimilate with the concept of monochrome paintings; a sterile interpretational context when taking into account that Qiu's works — though representative of a relevant position in contemporary art  — position themselves beyond the self-reflective, formalistic concepts of modernism. Here, Frank Stella's pragmatic, yet arrogant motto — "what you see is what you see"  — runs idle.

It is characteristic of Qiu's paintings that different beholders generally make out different shapes within the image, while actively perceiving and identifying the motive more or less clearly as such an astonishing occurrence, even if one considers that perception is an individual phenomenon. Indeed, the extremely cautious articulation of the paintings gradually unravels their pictorial character under the gaze of the beholder, a phenomenon where time plays a key role — not unlike James Turrell's lighting rooms whose pictorial presence only constitutes with time. While Turrell's works require the eyes to adapt to the peculiar light they radiate, Qiu's paintings seem to involve yet another dimension: a contemplative momentum not merely addressing sight. Embedded in the pictorial surface, the motive is not aimed at representation but rather at evoking an essence, something which Roland Barthes, in his melancholic reflections on photography, missed when contemplating the photographs portraying his mother: amidst the numerous petty details he was unable to recognize the beloved being he remembered.

The chemical process of photography provides a cunning metaphor for the perceptual mode induced by Qiu's paintings. The way in which their motives slowly condense to form a picture and take shape in our spirit can be compared to photochemical processing in the dark room. Immersed in a chemical bath, the photosensitive paper progressively reveals the imprint of light captured by the camera; we witness the image surface from the depths of the blank paper and its features become progressively distinguishable until the process is disrupted, whereby the illusion is recorded as a transient representation of the world. Along the lines of this analogy, Qiu's paintings appear to coincide with the intensity and time span of perception in different stages of the constituency or "development" of the image they contain. Untouched by the putative objectivity of photography, their volatility demands the viewer's careful evaluation of his perceptions, presuppositions and speculations. One always faces a highly ephemeral phenomenon; an epiphanic apparition which can hardly be termed unreal nor, for that matter, virtual in contemporary terminology  — quite on the contrary.

The paintings' sheer materiality is beyond doubt: the structure of the canvas as well as Qiu's concise technique sustain their reality. There is but the landscape, a motive derived from Chinese painting tradition, to divert our attention from the contemporary quality of the images. But once the veil of exoticism is shed, one discovers a painterly argument which holds a quite unique fascination for the Western view as well. According to Qiu, his working process grounds on the premise of forgetting about such painterly matters as motive, technique, emotion, thus achieving pure sensuality in the void space from which the image must emerge rather than construct itself. This involves a deliberate Taoist-inspired notion of unintentional practice, best illustrated by an anecdote about the 13th century Zen priest Ch'en Jung. Ch'en is said to have painted clouds and fog by spraying ink and spitting water on his paintings. Then, once he was replete with wine, he would be shouting while brushing his large strokes with his hat. This story echoes the incident related by Leonardo according to which Sandro Botticelli threw a sponge drenched in color on a canvas and subsequently modeled a landscape from the stains. As a matter of fact, the stain in itself is not art, but it can trigger the artistic imagination.

Qiu may not be working according to this recipe but he is nonetheless concerned with the unintentional aspects involved in painting. Provided that one broadens the idea of "stain-art" to encompass French impressionism, a current in painting which he particularly cherishes  — and which literally reduced its perception of the world to the level of stains  — yet another interpretational layer discloses. Starting with the "tache", impressionist painting builds on the fragmentation of visible reality, a process which dismisses the mimetic rendering of the motive in favor of the evocation of its substance  — Qiu's landscapes bear a similar degree of dissolving and substantiation. Still, their materialization is ultimately withheld, as if in the spirit of Caspar David Friedrich, the artist were shutting his "bodily eye" in order to paint straight from the heart. His evocation of romantic spirituality should not be evaluated in historical terms, for it expresses a fundamental attitude still present. Elaborated on the backdrop of abstract painting, Qiu's art acquires a new dimension. In both practices, the image emerges from the practice itself: without reference or ideology. Qiu's paintings confide their meaning through perception and cognition, through contemplation.

Qiu Shihua, untitled, 2008, oil on canvas, 153 x 231 cm.