Tokyo Gallery + BTAP is pleased to announce the opening of Wang Shuye's solo exhibition, Obscurity and Un-Shielding, on September 15th.
The works in this exhibition are inspired by the subject of the Forbidden City. Being an iconic Chinese architecture, the Forbidden City is also where Wang Shuye imagined the world in the past and present during his studies in the 1980s. In front of the Meridian Gate and outside of the palace walls, Wang left footsteps while searching for the depths of his spirit. The works presented in the exhibition extend from the artist's willingness to look deeper into the world's interior from that time to explore the possibilities of the perception of the present. The exhibition title, "Obscurity and Un-shielding," in which the former suggests a pre-cognitive perception that naturally relies on perception without visual recognition, while the latter points to the limitation in perceptions that transcend the everyday, thereby opening the instinctive sensibilities that would directly reach the world and thepossibilities of the essence of being. Applying such a perceptual approach, one wouldn't have to look up the stars, but being inside the room nevertheless allows one to understand the world as it is. It is possible to perceive the entirety of our being, which is boundless, while the artist translates his immediate surroundings into "representations of pre-cognitive perception." This common approach has thus become the way by which Wang emphasizes the subversion and reverse supplementation of the usual cognitive perceptions.
Wang Shuye's practice revolves around his original approach of "perceptual un-shielding," primarily grounded on his reflection of real people and their relationships with the world. In daily life, people are often confined to essentialist and egoistic perceptions. Should the direction of civilization excessively skew towards humanistic aspirations, it would undoubtedly be dangerous, causing anxiety and restless to people; in Wang Shuye’s view, "The value of art is not only its capacity for human expressions but in its ability to open up the possibilities for humans to transcend the limitations of their perceptions." By eliminating cognitive perception to reset and transcend the objectified worldview, the renewed self would integrate into the world and the eternal infinity of being. Such a way of being would embody the ultimate lyricism, affirmation, and liberation.
This exhibition will be on view until November 9th. We look forward to your visit.