fbpx
Wikipedia

Zhu Yu (artist)

Zhu Yu ( 朱昱 pinyin: Zhū Yù b. 1970[1]) is a performance artist and alleged cannibal living in Beijing, China. Zhu graduated from the Affiliated High School of the China Central Academy of Fine Arts in 1991. His work deals with subjects of contemporary art.

Zhu Yu
朱昱
Born1970
NationalityChinese
Notable workCannibalism (食人)
Sacrifice (献祭)
Leftover

Background edit

Zhu Yu is often termed[by whom?] the most controversial and criticized artist in China. Zhu graduated from the Affiliated High School of the Central Academy of Fine Arts in 1991. His contemporary performance art raises questions about moral agendas, and draws an audience through its shock value. His artwork often encompasses the human body. He is categorized by some critics as an artist of the “cadaver school,” which consists of artists who tend to use human body parts in their work.[2]

Yu's most famous piece of conceptual art, titled "Eating People," was performed at a Shanghai arts festival in 2000. It consisted of him cooking and eating what is alleged to be a human fetus.[3] The picture, circulated on the internet via e-mail in 2001, provoked investigations by both the FBI and Scotland Yard.[3] It was intended as "shock art".[4][5] Snopes and other urban legend sites have said the "fetus" used by Zhu Yu was most likely constructed from a duck's body and a doll head.[6][7][8][9][10][11][12] Other images from another art exhibit were falsely circulated along with Zhu Yu's photos and claimed to be evidence of fetus soup.[13] The piece's cannibalistic theme caused a stir in Britain when Yu's work was featured on a Channel 4 documentary exploring Chinese Contemporary Art in 2003.[14] In response to the public reaction, Mr. Yu stated, "No religion forbids cannibalism. Nor can I find any law which prevents us from eating people. I took advantage of the space between morality and the law and based my work on it".[14] Yu created a fictional film in 2003 titled "Corpse Case" which was based on "Eating People". In it the main character eats a fetus which was stolen from a medical school.[15] Images from the piece have also been used in anti-Chinese propaganda, disseminated by e-mail and social media with a short text attached explaining the images show China's "hottest food" and that dead fetuses can be bought for 10–12,000 Yen (sic) (approximately US$100 - US$120). Recipients are encouraged to forward the mail, and the explanatory text is written in both English and Korean script. The Turkistan Islamic Party claimed that "Muslim children in Turkistan" were eaten by the Chinese, showing the faked pictures by Zhu Yu and photos of fake fetuses from an art exhibit.[16]

Exhibitions edit

Zhu Yu has been involved in many group exhibitions including Post-Sense Sensibility- Alien Bodies & Delusion in Beijing (January 1999), and The Third Guangzhou Triennial in Guangzhou (September 2008), which involved 181 artists from 40 countries.[17]

Most notable is his work at the Fuck Off Exhibit curated by Ai Weiwei and Feng Boyi in Shanghai, 2000. This controversial exhibit hosted 48 contemporary avant-garde artists. This is where his most controversial piece of performance art “Eating People” appeared. Among his other solo exhibitions are Plaything (Long March Space, Beijing 2010) and Leftover (Xin Beijing Art Gallery, Beijing, 2007).

Significant works edit

The Foundation of All Epistemology: This work appeared in the 1998 group exhibition It’s All Right in Shanghai. For this piece, Zhu Yu cut and boiled five human brains which were purchased from a local hospital. He placed them in neatly labeled jars that he then signed with his own name. Zhu put these jars of brains up for sale in a market that sponsored the exhibit. He ended up selling 15 bottles each for the price of 98 yuans.

Eating People: In his performance art piece Eating People, Zhu photographs himself cooking and eating a human fetus that he divided into five parts. Zhu says that “I herewith announce my intention and my aim to eat people as a protest against mankind’s moral idea that he/she cannot eat people.” [18] In further response to Zhu's performance, The Ministry of Culture cited a menace to social order and the spiritual health of the Chinese people, and banned exhibitions involving culture, animal abuse, corpses, and overt violence and sexuality.[failed verification][19][20][21] However, this piece did not even appear at the exhibit; the night before the exhibition, Ai Weiwei collaborated with Zhu and the photographs were removed from the gallery. This piece was thought particularly controversial, and organizers did not want to risk government censorship for the rest of the exhibit. The response to this work stemmed from its appearance on the internet shortly after. This later generated the question of whether eating babies was accepted in Asia on various myth-debunking websites.

Pocket Theology: Appearing in the 1999 group exhibition Post-Sense Sensibility- Alien Bodies & Delusion in Beijing, curated by Wu Meichun and Qiu Zhije. A long coiling rope was gripped by a severed, decomposing arm which was suspended by a meat hook. This display was held in a small room in the basement that was being rented by a group of Chinese artists who organize the exhibition. Viewers were forced to walk over the rope which filled the entire space.

Skin Graft:[22] This performance art installation appeared in the 2000 exhibition Infatuation with Injury organized by Li Xianting. In the exhibit, Zhu uses his own flesh as a canvas. Photos were shown of trunk of a quartered pig lying on a hospital bed. Zhu grafted a piece of his own skin onto a section of damaged skin from the pig. Two photos of this process appeared in the exhibit; one that showed the surgical process, and another which featured the artist sewing his own skin onto the pig carcass. Zhu stood by the exhibit and lifted his shirt to show the scar which stood as evidence of the procedure.[2]

Leftover: This series was exhibited by the Xin Beijing Art Gallery at the China International Gallery Exposition. Zhu photographed plates that held bits of leftover food, and then painted those images on canvas with oil. Eight paintings appeared at the Xin Beijing Art Gallery.

Recent works edit

Zhu Yu's most recent works[needs update] follow his ideas with the Leftover exhibit, in which he paints highly detailed portraits of mundane objects. His series “Stain,” features a bird's-eye view of teacups that contain the dregs of tea leaves. The next series, “Pebble,” appeared at Zhu's solo exhibition Play Thing, at the Long March Space[23] in Beijing, 2010. This is another series of highly detailed, realistic paintings that show individual pebbles, each featuring a slightly different hue or shape. This work implies that all life can be reduced to a pebble, a simple object from which much meaning can be derived.[24]

Exhibitions[needs update] edit

  • Long March Space- Beijing@Sh Contemporary 2011: September 2011, Shanghai Exhibition Center, Shanghai
  • "Top Events" 3rd Session- Poster Exhibition: September–October 2011, TOP Contemporary Art Center, Shanghai
  • Long March Space@Art Beijing 2011 Contemporary Art Fair: April–May 2011, National Agriculture Exhibition Center, Beijing
  • Long March Space@ShContemporary 2010 Shanghai Art Fait International: September 2010, Shanghai Exhibition Center, Shanghai
  • Discoveries: Re-Value@ShContemporary 2010 Shanghai Art Fair International: September 2010, Shanghai Exhibition Center, Shanghai
  • Great Performance: August- October 2010, Pace Beijing, Beijing
  • Play Thing(Solo): April–May 2010, Long March Project, Beijing
  • Jungle: A Close-up Focus on Chinese Contemporary Art Trends: March–May 2010, Platform Chinga Contemporary Art Institute Space A, Beijing
  • Contemporary Art Exhibition in Songjiang: September 2009, Shanghai Songjiang Creative Studio, Shanghai
  • Blackboard: May–June 2009, ShanghART Gallery, Shanghai
  • Xin Beijing Art Gallery@ShContemporary 08: September 2008, Shanghai Exhibition Center
  • "Insomnia" Photographs Exhibition: September 2008, BizArt Center, Shanghai
  • The Third Guanzhou Triennial: September–November 2008, Guangdong Museum of Art, Guangzhou
  • Portraying Food: June–July 2008, Walsh Gallery, Chicago
  • Illegal Construction II: March–May 2008, Long March Project, Beijing
  • Retrospective Exhibition I: January 2008, Xin Beijing Art Gallery, Beijing
  • Exit/Entrance: September–October 2007, Xin Beijing Art Gallery, Beijing
  • Xin Beijing Art Gallery@ShContemporary 07: September 2007, Shanghai Exhibition Center, Shanghai
  • Leftover (Solo): August 2007, Xin Beijing Art Gallery, Beijing
  • NONO: April–June 2007, Long March Project, Beijing
  • It’s All Right: December 2006, BizArt Center, Shanghai
  • One Project Composed of 100 Projects (Solo): May 2006, BizArt Center, Shanghai
  • Conspire: November–January 2005/2006, TS1 Gallery, Beijing
  • Internal Injuries Part 1: July–September 2005, Primo Marella Gallery, Beijing
  • Dial 62721232: 2004, BizArt Center, Beijing
  • Nasty: October 2003, BizArt Center, Beijing
  • Mushroom, Or Utopia: November–December 2002, The Bund Museum, Shanghai
  • Fan Mingzhen and Fan Mingzhen: November 2002, BizArt Center, Beijing
  • Fuck Off: November 2000, Shanghai Eastlink Gallery, Shanghai
  • It’s All Right: January 1998-December 2006, BizArt Center, Beijing[25]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "'Artist' Eats Baby On TV." (January 2, 2003). Sky News. Retrieved July 8, 2006.
  2. ^ a b Cheng, Meiling (2 October 2018). "Violent Capital: Zhu Yu on File". TDR. 49 (3): 58–77. doi:10.1162/1054204054742471. JSTOR 4488657. S2CID 57568396.
  3. ^ a b Mikkelson, Barbara. (June 19, 2001). "Fetus Feast. Urban Legends Reference Pages. Retrieved July 8, 2006.
  4. ^ Berghuis 2006, p. 163.
  5. ^ Davis 2009, p. 729.
  6. ^ "FACT CHECK: Are Human Fetuses 'Taiwan's Hottest Dish'?". Snopes.com. 19 June 2001. Retrieved 2 October 2018.
  7. ^ "Chinese Eat Baby Soup for Sex - Facts Analysis - Hoax Or Fact". Hoaxorfact.com. 2014-07-10. Retrieved 2 October 2018.
  8. ^ "No, People in China Don't Eat Babies". Urbanlegends.about.com. Retrieved 2 October 2018.
  9. ^ "So they eat babies? - Hidden Harmonies China Blog". Blog.hiddenharmonies.org. Retrieved 2 October 2018.
  10. ^ "Do the chinese eat babies Hoax". YouTube. 12 November 2013. Archived from the original on 2021-12-21. Retrieved 2 October 2018.
  11. ^ "Cannibalism and the Chinese Body Politic : Hermeneutics and Violence in Cross-Cultural Perception". Pmc.iath.virginia.edu. Retrieved 2 October 2018.
  12. ^ Carlos Rojas. "Cannibalism and the Chinese Body Politic: Hermeneutics and Violence in Cross-Cultural Perception" (TXT). pmc.iath.virginia.edu. Retrieved 2 October 2018.
  13. ^ Chino (30 April 2015). . Wereblog.com. Archived from the original on 27 Nov 2016.
  14. ^ a b " Baby-eating art show sparks upset." (January 3, 2003). BBC News. Retrieved July 8, 2006.
  15. ^ Rojas, Carlos. (2002). Cannibalism and the Chinese Body Politic: Hermeneutics and Violence in Cross-Cultural Perception. Post Modern Culture, 12 (3). Retrieved July 8, 2006.
  16. ^ Zelin, Aaron Y. (May 26, 2016). "New video message from Ḥizb al-Islāmī al-Turkistānī in Bilād al-Shām: "Blessings Are the Strangers #2"". Jihadology.net.
  17. ^ Charles LaBelle. "Third Guangzhou Triennial". Artinfo. Retrieved 20 June 2015.
  18. ^ Fuck Off! Please, 2000; Ai Weiwei, Feng Boyi
  19. ^ Zhu Yu (2004-06-04). . arts.tom.com. Archived from the original on June 4, 2004. Retrieved 2015-11-21.
  20. ^ New China, new art; Munich ; New York : Prestel, c2008.
  21. ^ Zhu Yu (2004). "Court Records – The Case of Zhu Yu Insulting the Corpse, 庭審記錄﹣朱昱侮辱屍體案". Asia Art Archive. Retrieved 21 June 2022. A work by Zhu Yu at 'DIAL '62761232'.
  22. ^ Contemporary Chinese Art: Primary Documents, New York : Museum of Modern Art ; Durham, N.C. : Distributed by Duke University Press, c2010.
  23. ^ "恭喜,站点创建成功!".
  24. ^ "LONG MARCH SPACE". longmarchspace.com. Retrieved 20 June 2015.
  25. ^ "Zhu Yu - artist - ARTLINKART - Chinese contemporary art database". www.artlinkart.com. Retrieved 20 June 2015.

Other sources edit

  • 5. Cheng, Meiling (2005) "Violent Capital: Zhu Yu on File." The Drama Review: The Journal of Performance Studies 49.3 (Fall): 58–77.

External links edit

  • Reports of Contemporary Cannibalism in China (pics)

artist, 朱昱, pinyin, zhū, 1970, performance, artist, alleged, cannibal, living, beijing, china, graduated, from, affiliated, high, school, china, central, academy, fine, arts, 1991, work, deals, with, subjects, contemporary, yu朱昱born1970chengdu, people, republi. Zhu Yu 朱昱 pinyin Zhu Yu b 1970 1 is a performance artist and alleged cannibal living in Beijing China Zhu graduated from the Affiliated High School of the China Central Academy of Fine Arts in 1991 His work deals with subjects of contemporary art Zhu Yu朱昱Born1970Chengdu People s Republic of ChinaNationalityChineseNotable workCannibalism 食人 Sacrifice 献祭 Leftover Contents 1 Background 2 Exhibitions 3 Significant works 4 Recent works 5 Exhibitions needs update 6 See also 7 References 8 Other sources 9 External linksBackground editZhu Yu is often termed by whom the most controversial and criticized artist in China Zhu graduated from the Affiliated High School of the Central Academy of Fine Arts in 1991 His contemporary performance art raises questions about moral agendas and draws an audience through its shock value His artwork often encompasses the human body He is categorized by some critics as an artist of the cadaver school which consists of artists who tend to use human body parts in their work 2 Yu s most famous piece of conceptual art titled Eating People was performed at a Shanghai arts festival in 2000 It consisted of him cooking and eating what is alleged to be a human fetus 3 The picture circulated on the internet via e mail in 2001 provoked investigations by both the FBI and Scotland Yard 3 It was intended as shock art 4 5 Snopes and other urban legend sites have said the fetus used by Zhu Yu was most likely constructed from a duck s body and a doll head 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Other images from another art exhibit were falsely circulated along with Zhu Yu s photos and claimed to be evidence of fetus soup 13 The piece s cannibalistic theme caused a stir in Britain when Yu s work was featured on a Channel 4 documentary exploring Chinese Contemporary Art in 2003 14 In response to the public reaction Mr Yu stated No religion forbids cannibalism Nor can I find any law which prevents us from eating people I took advantage of the space between morality and the law and based my work on it 14 Yu created a fictional film in 2003 titled Corpse Case which was based on Eating People In it the main character eats a fetus which was stolen from a medical school 15 Images from the piece have also been used in anti Chinese propaganda disseminated by e mail and social media with a short text attached explaining the images show China s hottest food and that dead fetuses can be bought for 10 12 000 Yen sic approximately US 100 US 120 Recipients are encouraged to forward the mail and the explanatory text is written in both English and Korean script The Turkistan Islamic Party claimed that Muslim children in Turkistan were eaten by the Chinese showing the faked pictures by Zhu Yu and photos of fake fetuses from an art exhibit 16 Exhibitions editZhu Yu has been involved in many group exhibitions including Post Sense Sensibility Alien Bodies amp Delusion in Beijing January 1999 and The Third Guangzhou Triennial in Guangzhou September 2008 which involved 181 artists from 40 countries 17 Most notable is his work at the Fuck Off Exhibit curated by Ai Weiwei and Feng Boyi in Shanghai 2000 This controversial exhibit hosted 48 contemporary avant garde artists This is where his most controversial piece of performance art Eating People appeared Among his other solo exhibitions are Plaything Long March Space Beijing 2010 and Leftover Xin Beijing Art Gallery Beijing 2007 Significant works editThe Foundation of All Epistemology This work appeared in the 1998 group exhibition It s All Right in Shanghai For this piece Zhu Yu cut and boiled five human brains which were purchased from a local hospital He placed them in neatly labeled jars that he then signed with his own name Zhu put these jars of brains up for sale in a market that sponsored the exhibit He ended up selling 15 bottles each for the price of 98 yuans Eating People In his performance art piece Eating People Zhu photographs himself cooking and eating a human fetus that he divided into five parts Zhu says that I herewith announce my intention and my aim to eat people as a protest against mankind s moral idea that he she cannot eat people 18 In further response to Zhu s performance The Ministry of Culture cited a menace to social order and the spiritual health of the Chinese people and banned exhibitions involving culture animal abuse corpses and overt violence and sexuality failed verification 19 20 21 However this piece did not even appear at the exhibit the night before the exhibition Ai Weiwei collaborated with Zhu and the photographs were removed from the gallery This piece was thought particularly controversial and organizers did not want to risk government censorship for the rest of the exhibit The response to this work stemmed from its appearance on the internet shortly after This later generated the question of whether eating babies was accepted in Asia on various myth debunking websites Pocket Theology Appearing in the 1999 group exhibition Post Sense Sensibility Alien Bodies amp Delusion in Beijing curated by Wu Meichun and Qiu Zhije A long coiling rope was gripped by a severed decomposing arm which was suspended by a meat hook This display was held in a small room in the basement that was being rented by a group of Chinese artists who organize the exhibition Viewers were forced to walk over the rope which filled the entire space Skin Graft 22 This performance art installation appeared in the 2000 exhibition Infatuation with Injury organized by Li Xianting In the exhibit Zhu uses his own flesh as a canvas Photos were shown of trunk of a quartered pig lying on a hospital bed Zhu grafted a piece of his own skin onto a section of damaged skin from the pig Two photos of this process appeared in the exhibit one that showed the surgical process and another which featured the artist sewing his own skin onto the pig carcass Zhu stood by the exhibit and lifted his shirt to show the scar which stood as evidence of the procedure 2 Leftover This series was exhibited by the Xin Beijing Art Gallery at the China International Gallery Exposition Zhu photographed plates that held bits of leftover food and then painted those images on canvas with oil Eight paintings appeared at the Xin Beijing Art Gallery Recent works editZhu Yu s most recent works needs update follow his ideas with the Leftover exhibit in which he paints highly detailed portraits of mundane objects His series Stain features a bird s eye view of teacups that contain the dregs of tea leaves The next series Pebble appeared at Zhu s solo exhibition Play Thing at the Long March Space 23 in Beijing 2010 This is another series of highly detailed realistic paintings that show individual pebbles each featuring a slightly different hue or shape This work implies that all life can be reduced to a pebble a simple object from which much meaning can be derived 24 Exhibitions needs update editLong March Space Beijing Sh Contemporary 2011 September 2011 Shanghai Exhibition Center Shanghai Top Events 3rd Session Poster Exhibition September October 2011 TOP Contemporary Art Center Shanghai Long March Space Art Beijing 2011 Contemporary Art Fair April May 2011 National Agriculture Exhibition Center Beijing Long March Space ShContemporary 2010 Shanghai Art Fait International September 2010 Shanghai Exhibition Center Shanghai Discoveries Re Value ShContemporary 2010 Shanghai Art Fair International September 2010 Shanghai Exhibition Center Shanghai Great Performance August October 2010 Pace Beijing Beijing Play Thing Solo April May 2010 Long March Project Beijing Jungle A Close up Focus on Chinese Contemporary Art Trends March May 2010 Platform Chinga Contemporary Art Institute Space A Beijing Contemporary Art Exhibition in Songjiang September 2009 Shanghai Songjiang Creative Studio Shanghai Blackboard May June 2009 ShanghART Gallery Shanghai Xin Beijing Art Gallery ShContemporary 08 September 2008 Shanghai Exhibition Center Insomnia Photographs Exhibition September 2008 BizArt Center Shanghai The Third Guanzhou Triennial September November 2008 Guangdong Museum of Art Guangzhou Portraying Food June July 2008 Walsh Gallery Chicago Illegal Construction II March May 2008 Long March Project Beijing Retrospective Exhibition I January 2008 Xin Beijing Art Gallery Beijing Exit Entrance September October 2007 Xin Beijing Art Gallery Beijing Xin Beijing Art Gallery ShContemporary 07 September 2007 Shanghai Exhibition Center Shanghai Leftover Solo August 2007 Xin Beijing Art Gallery Beijing NONO April June 2007 Long March Project Beijing It s All Right December 2006 BizArt Center Shanghai One Project Composed of 100 Projects Solo May 2006 BizArt Center Shanghai Conspire November January 2005 2006 TS1 Gallery Beijing Internal Injuries Part 1 July September 2005 Primo Marella Gallery Beijing Dial 62721232 2004 BizArt Center Beijing Nasty October 2003 BizArt Center Beijing Mushroom Or Utopia November December 2002 The Bund Museum Shanghai Fan Mingzhen and Fan Mingzhen November 2002 BizArt Center Beijing Fuck Off November 2000 Shanghai Eastlink Gallery Shanghai It s All Right January 1998 December 2006 BizArt Center Beijing 25 See also editChild cannibalism Rick GibsonReferences edit Artist Eats Baby On TV January 2 2003 Sky News Retrieved July 8 2006 a b Cheng Meiling 2 October 2018 Violent Capital Zhu Yu on File TDR 49 3 58 77 doi 10 1162 1054204054742471 JSTOR 4488657 S2CID 57568396 a b Mikkelson Barbara June 19 2001 Fetus Feast Urban Legends Reference Pages Retrieved July 8 2006 Berghuis 2006 p 163 Davis 2009 p 729 FACT CHECK Are Human Fetuses Taiwan s Hottest Dish Snopes com 19 June 2001 Retrieved 2 October 2018 Chinese Eat Baby Soup for Sex Facts Analysis Hoax Or Fact Hoaxorfact com 2014 07 10 Retrieved 2 October 2018 No People in China Don t Eat Babies Urbanlegends about com Retrieved 2 October 2018 So they eat babies Hidden Harmonies China Blog Blog hiddenharmonies org Retrieved 2 October 2018 Do the chinese eat babies Hoax YouTube 12 November 2013 Archived from the original on 2021 12 21 Retrieved 2 October 2018 Cannibalism and the Chinese Body Politic Hermeneutics and Violence in Cross Cultural Perception Pmc iath virginia edu Retrieved 2 October 2018 Carlos Rojas Cannibalism and the Chinese Body Politic Hermeneutics and Violence in Cross Cultural Perception TXT pmc iath virginia edu Retrieved 2 October 2018 Chino 30 April 2015 The Truth Behind The Viral Photo Of A Chinese Man Eating Fetus Wereblog com Archived from the original on 27 Nov 2016 a b Baby eating art show sparks upset January 3 2003 BBC News Retrieved July 8 2006 Rojas Carlos 2002 Cannibalism and the Chinese Body Politic Hermeneutics and Violence in Cross Cultural Perception Post Modern Culture 12 3 Retrieved July 8 2006 Zelin Aaron Y May 26 2016 New video message from Ḥizb al Islami al Turkistani in Bilad al Sham Blessings Are the Strangers 2 Jihadology net Charles LaBelle Third Guangzhou Triennial Artinfo Retrieved 20 June 2015 Fuck Off Please 2000 Ai Weiwei Feng Boyi Zhu Yu 2004 06 04 录像作品 朱昱侮辱尸体案 文字记录 arts tom com Archived from the original on June 4 2004 Retrieved 2015 11 21 New China new art Munich New York Prestel c2008 Zhu Yu 2004 Court Records The Case of Zhu Yu Insulting the Corpse 庭審記錄 朱昱侮辱屍體案 Asia Art Archive Retrieved 21 June 2022 A work by Zhu Yu at DIAL 62761232 Contemporary Chinese Art Primary Documents New York Museum of Modern Art Durham N C Distributed by Duke University Press c2010 恭喜 站点创建成功 LONG MARCH SPACE longmarchspace com Retrieved 20 June 2015 Zhu Yu artist ARTLINKART Chinese contemporary art database www artlinkart com Retrieved 20 June 2015 Other sources edit5 Cheng Meiling 2005 Violent Capital Zhu Yu on File The Drama Review The Journal of Performance Studies 49 3 Fall 58 77 External links editReports of Contemporary Cannibalism in China pics Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Zhu Yu artist amp oldid 1189966270, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.