2008 Exhibition

Artists:  Liu Wei, Tseng Yu-Chin, Ai Weiwei

The 2008 Chinese Contemporary Art Awards, announced in January of 2008, culminate with an exhibition traveling from Shanghai to Beijing between September and December. The exhibition, which was  shown first in the Creative Center of Bund 18 in Shanghai and then the Ullens Center for Contemporary Art in Beijing,  presented an offering of important and recent works by Liu Wei, Tseng Yu-Chin, and Ai Weiwei.

These three artists were selected by a jury committee consisting of Hou Hanru, Director of Exhibitions and Public Programs and Chair of Exhibitions and Museum Studies at the San Francisco Art Institute; Ken Lum, Canadian artist of Chinese heritage who has received a Guggenheim fellowship, enjoyed a career in education, and been invited to many major exhibition; Gu Zhenqing, curator and critic in charge of the recently opened gallery Li Space; Chris Dercon, director of the Haus der Kunst in Munich; Ruth Noack, curator of Documenta 12; Huang Du, independent curator and critic who curated the sixth Shanghai Biennale; and Uli Sigg, founder of CCAA. These esteemed critics, artists, and curators took as their criteria the display of original and unique talent in artistic creation. This academic criteria should help stimulate debate over the concept of artistic value in the currently booming art market. The exhibition of the winning artists works will be accompanied by a publication written by Pauline Yao, who received the newly-established Chinese Contemporary Art Award for independent art criticism in 2008.

2008 ccaa exhibi2 2008ccaa exhibi1 Tseng Yu-Chin

Liu Wei, recognized for the Best Artist award, challenges the limitations of experience and the standard of discourse implied by the language of international contemporary art. His installation and conceptual work has achieved great success in terms of representing China in the international art scene. In his experiments, he continually revises his system of artistic production and methodically interrogates that which most artists take for granted. He has shaken our understandings of both the definition of contemporary art and the role played by the exhibition in this system. Liu Wei does not fear failure, and often begins again after unsatisfactory projects. In this way, he gestures towards a future beyond the current boom in the Chinese art market against a background of global production and consumption.

Tseng Yu-Chin, recognized for the Best Young Artist award, creates work characterized by a deep and subtle humanism. He is largely concerned with the role of the individual in the context of a changing contemporary society, especially in terms of the perceived demise of traditional configurations of community and family; his practice, however, is also filled with hope and redemption. His films and videos are in turns compassionate and voyeuristic, pushing depiction of his subjects almost to a point of representational crisis. In this way, he pays homage to the pioneering video art of Zhang Peili while developing towards a unique aesthetic voice. These pieces often appear as video vignettes borrowed from a particular model of Taiwanese cinema, allowing his work to act as a bridge between the changing modernities of mainland China and Taiwan, where he is based. Ai Weiwei is recognized with the Lifetime Achievement Award. Perhaps no artist has mirrored the volatile and challenging history of Chinese contemporary art more deeply and accurately than Ai Weiwei. His work has transcended the category of contemporary art and penetrated the very heart of Chinese society, engaging with China’s complex social and political dynamics and contributing to its radically changing architectural and designed spaces. His multivalent contributions have made Ai Weiwei a reference point for any student who desires to gain an understanding of the present situation of Chinese contemporary art and culture.

Exhibition images:
Ai Weiwei, <very YAO>, Liu Wei, <Energy Blocks>, Tseng Yu-Chin,<Quietly. I have five minutes>
2008 CCAA exhibition in Bund18 Creative Center,  Shanghai.
Ai Weiwei, 《》,Liu Wei, Uprooted Obelisk,  Tseng Yu-Chin,<Quietly. I have five minutes>
2008 CCAA exhibition in Ullens Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing.

 

 

 

About Chinese Contemporary Art Awards CCAA 
The Contemporary Chinese Art Awards CCAA are given biannually to Chinese artists and art critics who show particular talent in artistic creation and in its critique – to encourage their development through its publications and exhibitions, and to enhance awareness and appreciation of a wider public for what Chinese contemporary art contributes to contemporary culture. CCAA has been founded in 1997 by Uli Sigg, former Swiss Ambassador to China and leading collector of Chinese contemporary art