UCCA presents Landscape of Childhood, an exhibition by major artist Yan Pei-Ming. FollowingLes Funérailles de Monna Lisa exhibition in Musée du Louvre, Landscape of Childhood will stand as a surprising show and the first time Yan Pei-Ming has produced a show without canvases by experimenting with installation.
“Yan Pei-Ming has become the ultimate artist portraying the iconic characters of our time. His work stands as a major reference on the international contemporary art scene and this show should remain a milestone in history since it features the portraits of the icons of tomorrow: the next generation of Chinese citizens framed into an empty landscape, the future”, Jérôme Sans, UCCA Director and co-curator of Landscape of Childhood.
One huge landscape directly painted on the wall of UCCA’s Big Hall frames a series of painted flags representing portraits of 34 Chinese new born children. Imagined as an abounding walk trough faces and urban views, the exhibition powerfully conveys Yan Pei-Ming’s intentions and gives the audience an opportunity to discover a vision of our world in a landscape of crisis and beyond.
Yan Pei-Ming is famous for his monochromatic large portraits executed in either black and white or red shades. “I have never felt it necessary to put some things around the persons; I just want to draw portraits.”
“Yan Pei-Ming’s portraits, furiously and quickly executed with a strong, large brushstroke technique, reflect the artist’s concerns on social conflicts and international politics and present his ongoing concern for problems of universal human nature”, Guo Xiaoyan, UCCA Chief Curator and co-curator of Landscape of Childhood.
On the occasion of the presentation of Yan Pei-Ming: Landscapes of Childhood, UCCA intends to go beyond the usual art event. Partnering with another Non for Profit institution, The United Foundation for Chinese Orphans, we wanted to draw our audience attention towards these orphans and children whose families can not afford medical healthcare.
With the images of Chinese newborn babies’ portraits presented in the show, UCCA and The United Foundation for Chinese Orphans hope to raise wider support to provide adequate healthcare to all children, especially those abandoned and coping with mental and physical disabilities, living in China.