= Wang Jian-wei =

This is a Chinese name; the family name is Wang.  

Chinese, b. 1958, Sichuan Province, China, based in Beijing, China

Education and early life

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In 1975, towards the end of the Cultural Revolution, Wang Jianwei was sent to the countryside for ‘re-education’. In the absence of any culture or entertainment – there was no TV, no films, no books – the eighteen-year-old discovered that ‘art was like a drug, a resistance to that boredom’. Following this experience, Wang was drafted into the army. He was thirty when he left: ‘I felt my life was broken off. My whole experience had to be discarded. I had to learn everything anew.’ Returning to his home province, he worked in a factory and as a storekeeper at the local art school. Eventually he was able to enrol at the prestigious China Art Academy in Hangzhou, and graduated in 1987.

Work

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Wang Jianwei has been a pioneer in the Chinese contemporary art scene since the 70s. ‘Connection’ and ‘relationship’ have been the key phrases in Wang’s vocabulary. His work could be interpreted as an attempt to discover and expose the connection between beings, matters and concepts that may seem random on the surface. What he aspires to achieve is a kind of integration of knowledge in many fields that gives rise to his distinctive approach as an artist. Although he is known for his video work, in order to convey these complex networks of ideas, he is widely experimental with his mediums, and the ways in which the work exists.

Exhibitions

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Wang Jianwei has shown extensively both within China and internationally. Over the years his work has been exhibited in leading international art events such as (Documen¬ta, Venice Biennale, Gwangju Biennale and Sao Paulo Biennale). He also participated in critically acclaimed group exhibition such as; ‘Cities on the Move’, ‘China Now’ at the Museum of Modern Art, New York City, and ‘China Power Station (Part 3)’. Solo exhibitions of the artist have been held at various renowned institutions including Guggenheim Museum New York, Walker Art Centre, USA, Today Art Center, Beijing, Zendai Museum of Modern Art, Shanghai, and Asia-Australia Arts Center, Sydney.

Notable projects

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1. Solo show at Guggenheim Museum: Wang Jianwei: Time Temple,2014

Wang Jianwei’s work examines the contact between art and social reality. His highly innovative artworks consider space and time in elaborate ways: working from the notion that the production of artwork can be a continuous rehearsal, connecting theater, visual art, and film. Wang Jianwei: Time Temple is the artist’s first solo exhibition in North America. This exhibition comprises installation, painting, film, and a live theater production.

2. China Now at the Museum of Modern Art,2004

Over the past five years, Chinese media artists from Beijing and Shanghai to Hangzhou have gained access to the latest cameras and computer technology, and are producing vivid, original work. Their startling actions performed on crowded Chinese city streets, diaristic works with the flavor of “reality TV,” and narratives caught between tradition and utopian dreams portray China now. Although media art has received official acceptance in China, with prominent exposure in the Shanghai Biennial and the Guangzhou Triennial, work continues to flourish in an extensive alternative network that does not receive government endorsement.

Honors and Awards

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1.FCA grant, Foundation for Contemporary Arts, 2008.

With the support of his 2008 FCA grant, Wang created the multimedia project Welcome to the Desert of the Real (2008). Funds from his Grants to Artists award were also directed to his installation Hostage(2008), shown at the Shanghai Zendai Museum of Modern Art in Shanghai. 

2.Wang Jian-wei represented China in the 50rd Venice Biennale, in 2003.

Reference

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1.Review by Tatiana Isthmian on Brookly Rail

2.Interview at interview magazine by EMILY WASIK: WANG JIANWEI IN PROCESS

3.Review at Walker Art Museum

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1. Solo show at Guggenheim Museum: Wang Jianwei: Time Temple

2. Wang Jianwei at Art Basel.

3. Chambers Fine Art

4. Long March Space