'cloud-tea' by artist cai zhisong
image © designboom
venice is pervaded by 'chinese flavors'
the national chinese pavilion, located within the arsenale area at the venice art biennale 2011, shows 'pervasion' -
artworks created by cai zhisong, liang yuanwei, pan gongkai, yang maoyuan, and yuan gong.
peng feng, vice dean of the aesthetics and educational research center at peking university and curator of the chinese pavilion, presents five single-artist installations redolent of scents associated with the country's cultural tradition (as opposed to the west's traditional focus on aesthetics): tea, lotus, liquor, incense and herbal medicine.
here are some pictures from the scene:
the huge artificial clouds created by young artist cai zhisong
image © designboom
flavor and fragrance are designated by the same chinese character…
cai's work evokes tea; yuan's, the smell of incense; yang's, medicinal herbs; pan's, the smell of lotus;
and liang's the pungent scent of china's traditional white spirit -- 'baijiu'.
each cloud of 'cloud-tea' was lightly coated in white paint to add depth and layering
image © designboom
'cloud-tea' by cai zhisong
the white-painted 'devices' are made of steel and house wind chimes and tea.
when moved by the wind, the clouds emit the scent of tea and the sound of the wind itself. the fragrance comes from longjing tea, which the buddhist monks drink tea to keep a pure and refreshed mood. the installation is designed to induce feelings of being wakefulness and enlightenment.
clouds by cai zhisongimage © designboom
though appropriately related, the surrounding fog are incidentally part of another work, 'empty incense' by yuan gong.
using twenty sets of ultrasonic atomizers, the installation's high-pressure water mist system fills the pavilion with atomized incense fog every two hours, from a square of white pebbles laid on the grass.
'empty incense' by yuan gong
image © designboom
two clouds flanking yuan gong's 'empty incense' image © designboom
image © designboom
the opaqueness of the smokeimage © designboom
artist yuan gongportrait © designboom
yang maoyuan's 'all things are visible' on the ground of the arsenale cistern, visitors find thousands of medicine pots. traditional chinese medical prescriptions are carved on the
interior of these pots but on their outside there are no signs.
'according to the theory of traditional chinese medicine, all things are visible, be it the acupuncture points, meridians or collaterals,' yang illustrated, 'however, they do not
exist at all to modern science.'
yang maoyuan's 'all things are visible'
image © designboom
yang maoyuan's 'all things are visible'
image © designboom
yang maoyuan's 'all things are visible'
image © designboom
pan gongkai's 'snow melting in lotus'
image © designboom
for 'snow melting in lotus,' pan gongkai juxtaposes the traditional technique of ink painting with cut-out western characters that cascade along the ground.
detail of pan gongkai's 'snow melting in lotus'
image © designboom
BTW
apparently unaware of the human rights abuses occurring in many other nations present here, you could question whether chinese artists should have exhibited at all.
yang maoyuan's 'all things are visible'
image © designboom
yang maoyuan's 'all things are visible'
image © designboom
yang maoyuan's 'all things are visible'
image © designboom
pan gongkai's 'snow melting in lotus'
image © designboom
for 'snow melting in lotus,' pan gongkai juxtaposes the traditional technique of ink painting with cut-out western characters that cascade along the ground.
detail of pan gongkai's 'snow melting in lotus'
image © designboom
BTW
apparently unaware of the human rights abuses occurring in many other nations present here, you could question whether chinese artists should have exhibited at all.
the 54th international art exhibition in venice, italy, runs until nov. 27, 2011.
via designboom
Such an interesting story to read and I enjoyed reading it as well. Keep up the good work. herbal incense
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