Lot  54 Ravenel Autumn Auction 2015 Hong Kong

Ravenel Autumn Auction 2015 Hong Kong

Rouge Series, Mao

LI Shan (Chinese, 1942)

2005

Acrylic on canvas

55.7 x 45.6 cm

Estimate

TWD 508,000-763,000

HKD 120,000-180,000

USD 15,500-23,200

Sold Price

TWD 420,168

HKD 100,000

USD 12,903


Signature

Signed on the reverse Li Shan in Chinese and English, dated 2005
PROVENANCE:
Private collection, USA

+ OVERVIEW

The present lot is a good representation of Li Shan's popular Rouge series (This title has been used from 1989 to 1993). The portrait of Mao in the most handsome period in Yan'an. Normally the use of Chairman Mao's image has a political association. The painting of the leader in a jesting and humorous way has also reminded us the Mao painted by Andy Warhol. The Artist means nothing political. Instead, he believes that the society has placed too heavy a responsibility on the shoulder of art; in his opinion, art is art itself. His painting of Comrade Mao's is only a comical reflection of history, to relieve the heavy burden of art and to say farewell to the history by using the once sacred object or image.

At the China Modern Art Exhibition held in 1989 at Beijing-National Art Museum, Li Shan became famous for his performance art Washing Feet. Prior to that, Li once participated in the planning and exhibition of "the First Shanghai Concave - Convex Exhibition" in 1986 and "the Second Shanghai Concave - Convex Exhibition - The Last Supper" in 1988. His Rouge series was recognized as an important symbol of Political Pop Art in the 1990s. The New Art from China: Post-1989, Venice Biennale in 1993, and Sao Paulo Art Biennial in Brazil in 1994 were the key exhibitions where Li Shan's Rouge series gain increasing influence. Different from Li Shan's own expression about his art, the art critic Lu Peng believes that Li Shan attempts to express his opposed political differences

by taking a stance of keeping away from the direct ideology and

political confrontation; he obscures his political view through using

metaphorical rhetoric. However, in the 1990s of China, within the

historical context of political pop art, Li Shan's explanation was

largely considered credible. The irony, metonymy, metaphor, jeer,

indication, and analogy, which originally belong in the category

of artistic rhetoric, were actually a political discourse and an

ideological stance. It is in this sense that Li Shan's art is an important

part of the political pop art. At a stage of historical transition, Li Shan

has sent out the last reminder, with his art, to those who are on the

brink of forgetting the history .

Related Info

Modern & Contemporary Art

Ravenel Autumn Auction 2015 Hong Kong

Sunday, November 29, 2015, 11:00am