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Liu Bolin

Liu Bolin (simplified Chinese: 刘勃麟; traditional Chinese: 劉勃麟; pinyin: Liú Bólín; born 7 January 1973) is a contemporary concealment artist born in China's Shandong province. He earned his Bachelor of Fine Arts from the Shandong College of Arts in 1995 and his Master of Fine Arts from the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing in 2001. His work has been exhibited in museums around the world. Also known as "the invisible man", Liu's most popular works are from his "Hiding in the City" series, photographic works that began as performance art in 2005 in response to the artists' village in which he worked in Beijing being demolished in preparation for the 2008 Beijing Olympics.

Liu Bolin
刘勃麟
Liu Bolin
Born (1973-01-07) 7 January 1973 (age 50)
Shandong, China
NationalityChinese
Notable workHiding in the city

Liu belongs to the generation that came of age in the early 1990s, when China emerged from the rubble of the Cultural Revolution and was beginning to enjoy rapid economic growth and relative political stability.[1]

Since his first solo shows in Beijing in 1998, Liu's work has received international recognition. Among other international venues, his distinctive photographs and sculptures have been shown at the major contemporary photography festival and he had solo shows at Dashanzi Art Zone in Beijing (2007), Galerie Bertin-Toublanc in Paris (2007), Klein Sun Gallery in New York (2008), Galerie Paris-Beijing in Paris and Brussels (2013), (2008), Forma Foundation for Photography in Milan (2010),[2] H. C. Andersen Museum in Rome (2012).[3]

To celebrate US President Obama's visit to China, he made an effigy of Obama in his honor.[4]

He now lives and works in Beijing, China.

In June 2011, Liu created his Hiding in New York series, in which he incorporated iconic New York sites into his work.

In January 2013, Liu created the artwork for New Jersey hard rock band Bon Jovi's 2013 album What About Now.

Series edit

Hiding in the City edit

Liu was moved to create his "Hiding in the City" series after the destruction of the Beijing artists' village Suo Jia Cun in November 2005. At the time of the destruction, Liu had been working in Suo Jia Cun, previously given the title of Asia's largest congregation of artists. Prompted by his emotional response to the demolition of this site, Liu decided to use his art as a means of silent protest, calling attention to the lack of protection Chinese artists had received from their own government. Through the use of his own body in his practice of painting himself into various settings in Beijing, Liu created a space for Chinese artists, preserving their social status and highlighting their often troubled relationship with their physical surroundings.

In his work, Liu has always given special attention to the various social problems that accompany China's rapid economic development, making social politics the crux of his pictorial commentaries. In "Hiding in the City", Liu made one of his particular focuses slogans as an educational tool used within Communist societies, pointing out that many people would become used to the slogans over time and cease to pay conscious attention to the messages' effects on the public's thinking. By painting his body into some such slogans, Liu forces the viewer to acknowledge the messages and, in the process, to reconsider the circumstances of one's own life.

The "Hiding in the City" series has inspired similar subsequent series by Liu Bolin. In particular, "Shadow" draws on the same concept of the helplessness of the individual; however, instead of taking the individual in the face of society as its focal point, "Shadow" explores the relationship of the individual to its natural environment. Rather than painting himself into the background of various man-made structures, as he did in "Hiding in the City", here Liu lay on surfaces during periods of rain, keeping the space directly below his body dry. The flat human figure created by his presence always quickly disappeared when Liu moved away, demonstrating the extent to which humans are helpless before their environment. (The British artist Andrew Goldsworthy has also used the same technique, albeit in a natural environment.)

Liu Bolin followed up his Beijing series of "Hiding in the City" with two derivative series of performances captured in Venice, Milan, Rome, Pompeii, Verona and New York City. Following the method of painting himself into the cityscapes, Liu chose Italy for its significance within the Western art tradition and New York City for the potency of the underlying conflicts between humans and the objects they create. The first derivative series, on going since 2008, was titled "Hiding in Italy" and was collected into the solo exhibition "Liu Bolin. A Secret Tour", at H. C. Andersen Museum in Rome, curated by Raffaele Gavarro in 2012. In service to this project, Liu painted himself into such socially-loaded backgrounds as Wall Street and the Tiles for America 9/11 memorial.

In February 2012, a collaborative project was announced between Liu Bolin and designers Gaultier, Valentino, Lanvin and Missoni that was featured in the March 2012 issue of Harper's Bazaar magazine. Following the success of his series of works camouflaging prominent people into backgrounds, he collaborated with the French art star[5] JR. He was also featured as a prominent artist in a Newsweek profile titled Eli Klein on Riding the Wave of China's Contemporary Art Scene.

On the South Pier, at the Port of Catania, is recovered aground the first boat that in 2013 carried migrants from Africa to the coasts of Catania. Among them, six children Egyptians, exhausted for the trip on that vessel, were tragically drowned trying to reach the seashore, a few meters far from the Lido Beach Green (Lido Verde). The artist chose to merge his body with the wreck and the history of which he is a silent witness for his first shot of the MIGRANTS project, dated 2015. The scenario of the tragedy evoked by the first work, the Lido Verde, provides the second background to the Liu Bolin's photographic project. "Being immigrants lying on the sand," says the artist, "for someone they may seem dead; instead my intent is to describe their arrival and the start of their future."

Compared to the most famous and longest-running series Hiding in the City, where Liu Bolin is the focus of the photographic subject, the evolution of his shots called Target series provides for the disappearance of more people in the context, in line with the content. The whole series has been followed by Corriere della Sera and TGCOM24.

Exhibition history edit

Solo exhibitions edit

  • 2018: "Le théâtre des apparences", Musée de l'Élysée, Switzerland.
  • 2014:
  • 2013: Liu Bolin, Galerie Paris-Beijing, Paris, France
  • 2012:
  • 2012: "Liu Bolin: Hide in the City," Multimedia Art Museum Moscow
  • 2011: Hiding in the City, Galerie Paris-Beijing, Beijing, China
  • 2011: The Invisible Man, Klein Sun Gallery, New York, NY
  • 2011: The Invisible Man, Vänermuseet, Lidköping, Sweden
  • 2011: The Invisible Man, Fotografiska Stockholm, Sweden
  • 2011: "Hiding in Italy," Forma Centro Internazionale Di Fotografia, Milano, Italy
  • 2010: Hiding in the City, Museo de Bellas Artes, Caracas, Venezuela
  • 2010: Sunshine International Art Museum, Songzhuang, Beijing, China
  • 2010: On Fire, Klein Sun Gallery, New York, NY
  • 2008:
  • 2008: China Report 2007, Klein Sun Gallery, New York, NY
  • 2007: Sculpture, Dashanzi Art Zone, Beijing, China
  • 2007: Distortion, Dashanzi Art Zone, Beijing, China
  • 1998: Haiyang Works Exhibition, Yantai, China

Group exhibitions edit

  • 2015: Interact: Deconstructing Spectatorship: East Wing Biennial,[6] The Courtauld Institute of Art, London, England (with a. o. Sebastian Brajkovic, Matthew Buckingham, Pablo Delgado, Petra Feriancova, Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Dieter Jung, Donald Martiny, Julie Mehretu, Katie Paterson, Bridget Riley, Regina Silveira, Marc Quinn, Shezad Dawood)
  • 2011: Fotográfica Biennale, Museo de Fotografía, Bogotá, Colombia
  • 2011: Black and White, Zero Field Art Center, Beijing, China
  • 2010: The Right to Protest, Museum on the Seam, Jerusalem, Israel
  • 2010: Reflection of Minds. Shanghai MoCA, Shanghai, China
  • 2010: Passing China, Sanatorium, Istanbul, Turkey
  • 2010: HomeLessHome, Museum on the Seam, Jerusalem, Israel
  • 2010: Armed & Dangerous: Art of the Arsenal, Berkshire Museum, Pittsfield, MA
  • 2009-10: Animamix Biennial, Shanghai MoCA, Shanghai, China; Today Art Museum, Beijing, China; Guangdong Museum of Art, Guangzhou, China
  • 2009: Shore – Contemporary Academy Sculpture Exhibition, Moon River Art Museum, Beijing, China
  • 2009: Blank – Making China, Zhongjian Art Museum, Beijing, China
  • 2009: International Contemporary Art Invitational Exhibition, Seoul Art Museum, Seoul, Korea
  • 2009: Erotic – Contemporary Art Invitational Exhibition, Dadi Rui City Exhibition Center, Jinan, China
  • 2009: The Big World: Recent Art from China, Chicago Cultural Center, Chicago, USA
  • 2009: Passing By China, Klein Sun Gallery, New York, NY
  • 2009: Camouflage, La Casa Encendida, Madrid, Spain
  • 2008: Mixed Maze – Group Photography Exhibition, Red Mansion Foundation, London, UK
  • 2008: New Middle Kingdom, Royal Liver Building, Liverpool, UK
  • 2008: Live, Galerie Adler, Paris, France
  • 2008: Force-Form, International Contemporary Art Exhibition, Bridge Art Center, Beijing, China
  • 2008: Sunshine International Art Museum, Songzhuang, Beijing, China
  • 2007: Olympic Landscape Sculpture Exhibition, Beijing, China
  • 2007: Les Rencontres d'Arles, Arles, France
  • 2007: Made in China - Chinese Contemporary Art, Shanghai Duolun Museum of Modern Art, Shanghai, China
  • 2007: Union - Exhibition of Chinese and Chile Artists, No. 1 China Art Base, Beijing, China
  • 2007: Union in June, Chinese Performance Art Exhibition, Songzhuang, Beijing, China
  • 2007: Resettling - Suo Jia Village Modern Art Exhibition, Beijing International Arts Camp II Ka Tsuen, Beijing, China
  • 2007: The First 'Breathing' - Shandong Modern Art Exhibition, Shandong Museum, Shandong, China
  • 2006: Songzhuang Art Festival, Songzhuang Art Zone, Beijing, China
  • 2006: Qingzhou International Contemporary Art Exhibition, Qingzhou Museum, Shandong, China
  • 2006: Third Contemporary Art Exhibition, Sunshine International Museum, Beijing, China
  • 2006: Contemporary Art Exhibition of Dismantle, Xiyuantianlu Business Hotel, Beijing, China
  • 2005: Beijing Calligraphy Exhibition Maside Art Center, Beijing, China
  • 2005: Lead Times, Chang Chau Chinese Contemporary Sculpture Exhibition, Tianjin Harbor Plaza, Tianjin, China
  • 2005: Di-Di-Dismantle, Beijing International Arts Camp II Ka Tsuen, Beijing, China
  • 2005: Considerable, West Lake International Sculpture Exhibition, Hangzhou Fine Art Museum, Hangzhou, China
  • 2001: "The Second Invitational Sculpture Exhibition of Contemporary Young Sculptors," Hangzhou Fine Art Museum, Hangzhou, China
  • 2001: Works Exhibition The First China Sculpture Competition, China
  • 2000: The Second Metals Work Exhibition, Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing, China

Publications edit

  • Liu Bolin, , Maretti Editore, 2012. ISBN 9788889477885
  • Liu Bolin, Thircuir Books, 2012. ISBN 978-988-19924-5-1
  • Liu Bolin, , Shin Productions, Brescia, 2010. ISBN 9788889477885
  • Liu, Bolin; Benedetti, Beatrice; Tarocco, Francesca (2008). (PDF). Verona: Boxart. OCLC 800208108. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-10-11. Retrieved 2011-03-25.

References edit

  1. ^ (PDF). Shin Production. 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-10-11. Retrieved 2011-03-25.
  2. ^ (PDF). Shin Production. 2010. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-03-03. Retrieved 2011-03-25.
  3. ^ "A Secret Tour" 2016-10-11 at the Wayback Machine (Maretti Editore, 2012)
  4. ^ "'Burning Man Obama' (VIDEO): Chinese Artist Builds Effigy of President as Tribute". HuffPost. 18 March 2010.
  5. ^ Genis, Daniel (11 April 2015). "Eli Klein on Riding the Wave of China's Contemporary Art Scene". www.newsweek.com. Retrieved 3 May 2015.
  6. ^ . eastwingbiennal.org. Archived from the original on 2018-01-06. Retrieved 2018-01-02.

External links edit

  • Thircuir Books
  • Liu Bolin at TED  

bolin, this, article, external, links, follow, wikipedia, policies, guidelines, please, improve, this, article, removing, excessive, inappropriate, external, links, converting, useful, links, where, appropriate, into, footnote, references, october, 2020, learn. This article s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references October 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Liu Bolin simplified Chinese 刘勃麟 traditional Chinese 劉勃麟 pinyin Liu Bolin born 7 January 1973 is a contemporary concealment artist born in China s Shandong province He earned his Bachelor of Fine Arts from the Shandong College of Arts in 1995 and his Master of Fine Arts from the Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing in 2001 His work has been exhibited in museums around the world Also known as the invisible man Liu s most popular works are from his Hiding in the City series photographic works that began as performance art in 2005 in response to the artists village in which he worked in Beijing being demolished in preparation for the 2008 Beijing Olympics Liu Bolin 刘勃麟Liu BolinBorn 1973 01 07 7 January 1973 age 50 Shandong ChinaNationalityChineseNotable workHiding in the cityLiu belongs to the generation that came of age in the early 1990s when China emerged from the rubble of the Cultural Revolution and was beginning to enjoy rapid economic growth and relative political stability 1 Since his first solo shows in Beijing in 1998 Liu s work has received international recognition Among other international venues his distinctive photographs and sculptures have been shown at the major contemporary photography festival Les Rencontres d Arles and he had solo shows at Dashanzi Art Zone in Beijing 2007 Galerie Bertin Toublanc in Paris 2007 Klein Sun Gallery in New York 2008 Galerie Paris Beijing in Paris and Brussels 2013 Boxart Gallery in Verona 2008 Forma Foundation for Photography in Milan 2010 2 H C Andersen Museum in Rome 2012 3 To celebrate US President Obama s visit to China he made an effigy of Obama in his honor 4 He now lives and works in Beijing China In June 2011 Liu created his Hiding in New York series in which he incorporated iconic New York sites into his work In January 2013 Liu created the artwork for New Jersey hard rock band Bon Jovi s 2013 album What About Now Contents 1 Series 1 1 Hiding in the City 2 Exhibition history 2 1 Solo exhibitions 2 2 Group exhibitions 3 Publications 4 References 5 External linksSeries editHiding in the City edit Liu was moved to create his Hiding in the City series after the destruction of the Beijing artists village Suo Jia Cun in November 2005 At the time of the destruction Liu had been working in Suo Jia Cun previously given the title of Asia s largest congregation of artists Prompted by his emotional response to the demolition of this site Liu decided to use his art as a means of silent protest calling attention to the lack of protection Chinese artists had received from their own government Through the use of his own body in his practice of painting himself into various settings in Beijing Liu created a space for Chinese artists preserving their social status and highlighting their often troubled relationship with their physical surroundings In his work Liu has always given special attention to the various social problems that accompany China s rapid economic development making social politics the crux of his pictorial commentaries In Hiding in the City Liu made one of his particular focuses slogans as an educational tool used within Communist societies pointing out that many people would become used to the slogans over time and cease to pay conscious attention to the messages effects on the public s thinking By painting his body into some such slogans Liu forces the viewer to acknowledge the messages and in the process to reconsider the circumstances of one s own life The Hiding in the City series has inspired similar subsequent series by Liu Bolin In particular Shadow draws on the same concept of the helplessness of the individual however instead of taking the individual in the face of society as its focal point Shadow explores the relationship of the individual to its natural environment Rather than painting himself into the background of various man made structures as he did in Hiding in the City here Liu lay on surfaces during periods of rain keeping the space directly below his body dry The flat human figure created by his presence always quickly disappeared when Liu moved away demonstrating the extent to which humans are helpless before their environment The British artist Andrew Goldsworthy has also used the same technique albeit in a natural environment Liu Bolin followed up his Beijing series of Hiding in the City with two derivative series of performances captured in Venice Milan Rome Pompeii Verona and New York City Following the method of painting himself into the cityscapes Liu chose Italy for its significance within the Western art tradition and New York City for the potency of the underlying conflicts between humans and the objects they create The first derivative series on going since 2008 was titled Hiding in Italy and was collected into the solo exhibition Liu Bolin A Secret Tour at H C Andersen Museum in Rome curated by Raffaele Gavarro in 2012 In service to this project Liu painted himself into such socially loaded backgrounds as Wall Street and the Tiles for America 9 11 memorial In February 2012 a collaborative project was announced between Liu Bolin and designers Gaultier Valentino Lanvin and Missoni that was featured in the March 2012 issue of Harper s Bazaar magazine Following the success of his series of works camouflaging prominent people into backgrounds he collaborated with the French art star 5 JR He was also featured as a prominent artist in a Newsweek profile titled Eli Klein on Riding the Wave of China s Contemporary Art Scene On the South Pier at the Port of Catania is recovered aground the first boat that in 2013 carried migrants from Africa to the coasts of Catania Among them six children Egyptians exhausted for the trip on that vessel were tragically drowned trying to reach the seashore a few meters far from the Lido Beach Green Lido Verde The artist chose to merge his body with the wreck and the history of which he is a silent witness for his first shot of the MIGRANTS project dated 2015 The scenario of the tragedy evoked by the first work the Lido Verde provides the second background to the Liu Bolin s photographic project Being immigrants lying on the sand says the artist for someone they may seem dead instead my intent is to describe their arrival and the start of their future Compared to the most famous and longest running series Hiding in the City where Liu Bolin is the focus of the photographic subject the evolution of his shots called Target series provides for the disappearance of more people in the context in line with the content The whole series has been followed by Corriere della Sera and TGCOM24 Exhibition history editSolo exhibitions edit 2018 Le theatre des apparences Musee de l Elysee Switzerland 2014 Liu Bolin Fade in Italy Boxart Verona Italy 2013 Liu Bolin Galerie Paris Beijing Paris France 2012 Liu Bolin A Secret Tour Museo H C Andersen Rome Italy 2012 Liu Bolin Hide in the City Multimedia Art Museum Moscow 2011 Hiding in the City Galerie Paris Beijing Beijing China 2011 The Invisible Man Klein Sun Gallery New York NY 2011 The Invisible Man Vanermuseet Lidkoping Sweden 2011 The Invisible Man Fotografiska Stockholm Sweden 2011 Hiding in Italy Forma Centro Internazionale Di Fotografia Milano Italy 2010 Hiding in the City Museo de Bellas Artes Caracas Venezuela 2010 Sunshine International Art Museum Songzhuang Beijing China 2010 On Fire Klein Sun Gallery New York NY 2008 Hide and Seek Boxart Verona Italy 2008 China Report 2007 Klein Sun Gallery New York NY 2007 Sculpture Dashanzi Art Zone Beijing China 2007 Distortion Dashanzi Art Zone Beijing China 1998 Haiyang Works Exhibition Yantai ChinaGroup exhibitions edit 2015 Interact Deconstructing Spectatorship East Wing Biennial 6 The Courtauld Institute of Art London England with a o Sebastian Brajkovic Matthew Buckingham Pablo Delgado Petra Feriancova Felix Gonzalez Torres Dieter Jung Donald Martiny Julie Mehretu Katie Paterson Bridget Riley Regina Silveira Marc Quinn Shezad Dawood 2011 Fotografica Biennale Museo de Fotografia Bogota Colombia 2011 Black and White Zero Field Art Center Beijing China 2010 The Right to Protest Museum on the Seam Jerusalem Israel 2010 Reflection of Minds Shanghai MoCA Shanghai China 2010 Passing China Sanatorium Istanbul Turkey 2010 HomeLessHome Museum on the Seam Jerusalem Israel 2010 Armed amp Dangerous Art of the Arsenal Berkshire Museum Pittsfield MA 2009 10 Animamix Biennial Shanghai MoCA Shanghai China Today Art Museum Beijing China Guangdong Museum of Art Guangzhou China 2009 Shore Contemporary Academy Sculpture Exhibition Moon River Art Museum Beijing China 2009 Blank Making China Zhongjian Art Museum Beijing China 2009 International Contemporary Art Invitational Exhibition Seoul Art Museum Seoul Korea 2009 Erotic Contemporary Art Invitational Exhibition Dadi Rui City Exhibition Center Jinan China 2009 The Big World Recent Art from China Chicago Cultural Center Chicago USA 2009 Passing By China Klein Sun Gallery New York NY 2009 Camouflage La Casa Encendida Madrid Spain 2008 Mixed Maze Group Photography Exhibition Red Mansion Foundation London UK 2008 New Middle Kingdom Royal Liver Building Liverpool UK 2008 Live Galerie Adler Paris France 2008 Force Form International Contemporary Art Exhibition Bridge Art Center Beijing China 2008 Sunshine International Art Museum Songzhuang Beijing China 2007 Olympic Landscape Sculpture Exhibition Beijing China 2007 Les Rencontres d Arles Arles France 2007 Made in China Chinese Contemporary Art Shanghai Duolun Museum of Modern Art Shanghai China 2007 Union Exhibition of Chinese and Chile Artists No 1 China Art Base Beijing China 2007 Union in June Chinese Performance Art Exhibition Songzhuang Beijing China 2007 Resettling Suo Jia Village Modern Art Exhibition Beijing International Arts Camp II Ka Tsuen Beijing China 2007 The First Breathing Shandong Modern Art Exhibition Shandong Museum Shandong China 2006 Songzhuang Art Festival Songzhuang Art Zone Beijing China 2006 Qingzhou International Contemporary Art Exhibition Qingzhou Museum Shandong China 2006 Third Contemporary Art Exhibition Sunshine International Museum Beijing China 2006 Contemporary Art Exhibition of Dismantle Xiyuantianlu Business Hotel Beijing China 2005 Beijing Calligraphy Exhibition Maside Art Center Beijing China 2005 Lead Times Chang Chau Chinese Contemporary Sculpture Exhibition Tianjin Harbor Plaza Tianjin China 2005 Di Di Dismantle Beijing International Arts Camp II Ka Tsuen Beijing China 2005 Considerable West Lake International Sculpture Exhibition Hangzhou Fine Art Museum Hangzhou China 2001 The Second Invitational Sculpture Exhibition of Contemporary Young Sculptors Hangzhou Fine Art Museum Hangzhou China 2001 Works Exhibition The First China Sculpture Competition China 2000 The Second Metals Work Exhibition Central Academy of Fine Arts Beijing ChinaPublications editLiu Bolin A Secret Tour with texts by Matilde Amaturo Raffaele Gavarro Maretti Editore 2012 ISBN 9788889477885 Liu Bolin Thircuir Books 2012 ISBN 978 988 19924 5 1 Liu Bolin Hiding in Italy with texts by Beatrice Benedetti and Nicola Ricciardi Shin Productions Brescia 2010 ISBN 9788889477885 Liu Bolin Benedetti Beatrice Tarocco Francesca 2008 Liu Bolin Hide and Seek PDF Verona Boxart OCLC 800208108 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 10 11 Retrieved 2011 03 25 References edit Hide and seek PDF Shin Production 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 10 11 Retrieved 2011 03 25 Hiding in Italy PDF Shin Production 2010 Archived from the original PDF on 2016 03 03 Retrieved 2011 03 25 A Secret Tour Archived 2016 10 11 at the Wayback Machine Maretti Editore 2012 Burning Man Obama VIDEO Chinese Artist Builds Effigy of President as Tribute HuffPost 18 March 2010 Genis Daniel 11 April 2015 Eli Klein on Riding the Wave of China s Contemporary Art Scene www newsweek com Retrieved 3 May 2015 2014 2015 Interact Deconstructing Spectatorship eastwingbiennal org Archived from the original on 2018 01 06 Retrieved 2018 01 02 External links edit nbsp China portal nbsp Biography portal nbsp Visual arts portalBoxart Galleria d Arte Klein Sun Gallery Thircuir Books Liu Bolin at TED nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Liu Bolin amp oldid 1166112356, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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