Daily Prosperity
Upon first examination, the wallpaper pattern shown below appears to be little more than a modern, perhaps psychedelic, update of a traditional Chinese paper cut (click here, for traditional examples).
But closer examination reveals something more subtle, and more playful:
Though not obvious in this photo, there is a third key layer to this work: the images underlying the various logos were taken at Shanghai recycling centers and garbage dumps, and depict various types and degrees of consumer waste.
Designed by my friend Chen Hangfeng, a Shanghai-based artist and designer who has spent the last few years creating similarly playful, but serious works about the impact of consumerism on Chinese culture, this work – and others – constitute “Daily Prosperity,” a solo show currently on display at Shanghai’s Art Labor Gallery until January 2.
There is much to recommend this show, and I’d post about it even if Hangfeng wasn’t doing some interesting thinking about the role of waste in contemporary society. But, for the purposes of this blog, I’d like to recommend it precisely because Hangfeng is perhaps the only artist I’ve encountered who has touched on this subject without wrapping it up in undue layers of irony and politics. His work states its case succinctly, and allows the viewer to draw their own conclusions and – if necessary – politics. Believe me: in lesser hands, this topic becomes pretentious and over-wrought.
One of the things that I like about Hangfeng’s work (and Hangfeng) is his willingness to go out and “report” his creations. Last year, for example, he traveled to Zhejiang Province’s small-scale, export-oriented Christmas ornament workshops to obtain footage for his “Christ Mass Production,” an installation that – again – playfully challenged viewers to think about the consumer waste stream (in this case, a Christmas waste stream). Meanwhile, the filmed footage he obtained there remains – to my knowledge – the only such footage of those workshops in existence. It’s good journalism and it’s good art.
As it happens, Hangfeng and his gallery have made a film documenting his visits to the local recycling centers where he obtained the photographic images that underly the logos in his “paper cuts,” as well as the actual items that comprise Daily Prosperity’s chandelier centerpiece:
Note that the chandelier hangs over a rug woven with another version of Hangfeng’s logo cutout designs (logomania, to use Hangfeng’s title), surrounded by logomania wallpaper.
At the Friday night opening Hangfeng related to me the initial difficulties he had to overcome when he started showing up at his neighborhood recycling center, hoping to purchase items that – from the point of view of the managers and employees – weren’t worth much more than recycling value. “They wondered if I was doing some kind of investigation,” he told me. “Finally, I convinced them that I wanted the things for an artwork.” For those who know China’s recycling culture, the conclusion is predictable: “So finally they sold the things to me for more than what they sell them for waste.”
I sincerely hope that these moments are captured in the Art Labor Gallery film (it hasn’t been released yet). In the meantime, though, get your art loving selves down to Art Labor.
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This is the third “Creative Friend of Adam Minter” post in a row. Time for a category don’t ya think?
You haven’t said anything about the book lately but it sure sounds like your social life is interesting.
Comment by Gen — November 24, 2008 @ 10:56 am
Coincidence more than planning.
Comment by Adam — November 24, 2008 @ 11:27 am
How very clever. Art with the scrap, I don’t mind, looks pretty similar
BTW 2 litre plastic bottles in Dalian have risen from 2 fen (4 weeks ago) to 1 mao, still below our 4 mao peak over the summer holiday.
Comment by Alex — November 25, 2008 @ 1:42 am
Thanks for mentioning our show Adam, it is indeed a good one as everyone who has seen it will attest, and Chen Hangfeng does “report” on some interesting topics, especially this one – while making the film, he made some very interesting discoveries, scary about pricing actually, prices dropping by half since the Olympics and when you consider how many people in China subsist off this garbage picking/recycling, we are talking huge industry (Zhang Yin is China’s richest woman, if not person and she made it all from garbage and recyclables!) – he is certainly doing more with his art than many of his contemporaries. Not to mention that he is a damn nice guy as well, professional! not all that common in this art scene today…
Martin
Director
ART LABOR gallery &
ART LABOR SHANGHAI GROUP
Comment by Martin — December 8, 2008 @ 5:38 pm