• LIU SHIYUAN

    For Jord
  • Tanya Bonakdar Gallery is pleased to present the first solo exhibition of Liu Shiyuan in Los Angeles. Comprised of photography, video and drawings, the exhibition revolves around a fictional character named Jord. In Danish, the word jord translates to ‘earth’ or ‘dirt’, and as a name, it means ‘divine being’ or ‘peace’. In Liu’s work, this character is not human, not from the past or the future, and has no race or gender. They are the amorphous, symbolic protagonist who binds the work across ideological and formal narratives.

  • In her photography practice, Liu uses personal iPhone videos and Google image searches as primary sources for her work. By searching words and phrases online, Liu identifies images with multiple meanings that can be attributed to the same word, offering a diversity of perspectives and interpretations. At her studio in Copenhagen, Liu searched the word “Jord” on Google images, resulting in images of dirt. Interestingly, many of the thumbnails featured two hands holding soil - giving the dirt a border, a containment and a sense of belonging. As a country, a culture, or any community with boundaries, the character Jord represents our connected and shared nature. For Liu Shiyuan, a Chinese national living in Denmark, this common ground of all humans is an important aspect of our livelihood.

  • Liu’s new film, For the Photos I Didn’t TakeFor the Stories I Didn’t Read, is inspired by Danish author Hans Christian Andersen’s book The Little Match Seller. In 1920, The Little Match Seller was translated to Chinese and included in educational books throughout the country. The story was used by the Chinese government during the Cultural Revolution as a way of explaining how the communist party was saving China from the problems of Western capitalism. 
     
    As a Chinese national who has lived in Denmark for many years, Liu reintroduces the story to us in a new context, allowing the viewer to observe our differences, consider alternative perspectives and most importantly, understand our shared connection as humans.
  • two photographs installed
  • In Liu’s Almost Like Rebar and For Jord photographic series, each intricate composition results from a carefully considered and emotionally driven logic. Embedded in each photograph are a variety of images, from animals and natural landscapes to references of the artificial. Each image builds on this idea of semiotic complexity, how each symbol garners new connotations in unusual contexts. She also incorporates video into her photographs by laying out the video stills frame by frame on the picture surface. Emphasizing the story told by individual images, which is often different than the original film, the viewer is able to scrutinize every transitory moment otherwise unnoticed in a continuous motion picture.

  • The new gridded drawing series Cross Away follows a meticulous structure meant to embody an assembly-line work method as well as an investigation into color theory. Giving equal weight to each color, the series blends from one hue to the next. As individual works, they each represent one part of the larger whole, similar to an individual’s role in their community or culture. Together these drawings create a sequence of color transition, bringing the micro and macro perspectives into kaleidoscopic focus. For Liu, the scale of both the photographs and drawings are a reference to the scale of life - for being infinitely big, we must remember to scale down.

  • drawings hung in a row
  • Born in 1985 in Beijing, Liu Shiyuan now lives and works between Beijing and Copenhagen. She received her MFA in Photography from the School of Visual Arts, New York in 2012, and BFA from Central Academy of Fine Arts, Beijing in 2009.

     

    Her work has been shown in solo and group exhibitions around the world. Earlier this year, Liu had a major solo exhibition entitled Opaque Pollination at the Frost Museum at Florida International University in Miami. Liu’s Almost Like Rebar photography series will be included in the NGV Triennial opening December 19, 2020. In 2005, the YUZ Museum Shanghai held a solo presentation of her monumental photo-based installation As Simple As Clay. Her solo presentation My Paper Knife, Local Futures, Alter-Circuit was also featured in the Asia Contemporary Art Week 2014 in San Francisco. In 2014, Liu received Honorary AIR Award from Kala Art Institute, San Francisco, and in 2012, the Paula Rhodes Memorial Award, New York.

    Liu’s work has been featured in group exhibitions at institutions internationally, such as the Ullens Center for Contemporary Art, Beijing; K11 Art Foundation, Hong Kong; Pino Pascali Foundation Museum, Polignano; Foundation Louis Vuitton, Paris; Kunsthalle Düsseldorf; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Long Museum, Aurora Museum and Qiao Space, Shanghai; OCT-Contemporary Art Terminal and He Xiangning Art Museum, Shenzhen; and Vermillion Sands, Copenhagen, among others.