Geng Jianyi (born: Zhenzhou, 1962) is a multimedia artist based in Hangzhou where he currently teaches at the New Media Program at the China Academy of Art. Originally trained and recognized as a painter Geng’s recent works have focused on photography and video. His interests are varied and his work explores issues of individuality and identity through his personal experience of daily life, friendships and work.
Excessive Transition is presented at two locations on the campus of the University of British Columbia: at Koerner Library and at the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery as part of Yellow Signal: New Media in China that features the work of Geng Jianyi, Huang Ran and Zhang Peili.
Excessive Transition is a series of large and small black-and-white photographs of everyday objects from the artist’s life and features a collection of photographs of bottlenecks posted on magnet boards. It is part of Geng’s ongoing exploration of the essence of photography and the artist’s interest in what is seen and how it is interpreted. He employs various techniques such as mark making and frottage to manipulate the idea of what is evidenced in photographs. The semi-transparent, abstract and eerie subtle effects often give rise to psychologial explanations of the work. Though Geng’s work is not easy to define, Excessive Transition follows his concerns of the dissolution and disappearance of identity in a culture that is undergoing change.
This exhibition is presented as part of Yellow Signal: New Media in China – Geng Jianyi, Huang Ran, Zhang Peili at the Belkin Art Gallery (April 27 to August 19, 2012) and it is also part of the larger, city-wide project, Yellow Signal: New Media in China. Initiated by Centre A: Vancouver International Centre for Contemporary Asian Art, this series of exhibitions and programs is the first comprehensive presentation of contemporary Chinese new media and video art in Canada. It showcases a selection of leading new media works by internationally acclaimed Chinese artists.
The city-wide project is compelling for its portrayal of current political circumstances faced by many artists in China. “Yellow Signal is a metaphor for the communal state of ambiguity in Asian countries,” explains Zheng Shengtian, BC-based artist, curator and internationally recognized scholar and expert on contemporary Chinese art. He further explains, “Yellow Signal is about limitation and possibility, choice and chance, confusion and self-confidence. Feelings that many Asian artists experience, but that artists everywhere may also relate to in their creative practice.”
The library exhibition is a collaboration of the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery and the Walter C. Koerner Library at the University of British Columbia and is made possible by the generous support of the Audain Foundation. Art in the Library offers new perspectives on contemporary art by presenting art that challenges and questions our current perceptions.
Geng Jianyi
Excessive Transition series, 2008
15 gelatin silver prints, steel and magnets (detail)
Courtesy of the artist and ShanghART Gallery, Shanghai
Photo: Michael R. Barrick
The Audain Foundation
The Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery is pleased to present the work of Geng Jianyi, Huang Ran and Zhang Peili as part of the city-wide project Yellow Signal: New Media in China. Initiated by Centre A: Vancouver International Centre for Contemporary Asian Art, this series of exhibitions and programs is the first comprehensive presentation of contemporary Chinese new media and video art in Canada. It showcases a selection of leading new media works by internationally acclaimed Chinese artists.
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