Hu Fang: The Theater of Life
by Hu Fang
From the very
beginning, Cao Fei conveys a certain “new feeling” with a colorful, exaggerated
and highly dramatic visual style. And since the turn of the century, this “new
feeling” has been broken down into different features that characterize a new
generation of Chinese artists in their image making: mannerism (which is
related to the sense of loss and loneliness in one’s emotional life),
exaggeration (related to the emptiness of artificial reality) and an idea of
virtual existence (related to the confusion as to what to do in the period of
transition of values). However, only few artists possess a sense of humor like
that of Cao Fei’s, whose force derives from a keen understanding of the idea
that “life is like a drama and vice versa.” In fact, Cao Fei is constantly
reinforcing her relationship with daily life and her observation of social life
while evoking a feeling of “being cool” at the same time. She has therefore
developed a documentary way of expression. In her work, “Public Space: Give Me
A Kiss” (2002), a middle-aged man is simply enjoying himself on the corner of a
busy street, as if there were nobody else around. He dances day after day, and
although his positions and movements are rather amusing, he has an extremely
serious expression on his face. Another work, “Father,” consists in observing
the whole process of her father making sculptures of revolutionary figures.
With this film, Cao Fei has tried to iron out some of the creases in her
personal history. Although these images can even be described as being “traditional”
or “anti-cool,” they are the organic components of Cao Fei’s image world. This
reflects Cao Fei’s strong interests in revealing the fantastic, absurd forces
that exist in the process of urbanization, and the relationship between
individuals and society. This creative dynamic is destined to upset certain
categorizations of image styles.
The project she will present in the Sydney Biennial 2006 originates in a
collaborative project with Siemens entitled “What Are You Doing Here?” In her
encounter with the OSRAM factory, a subsidiary of Siemens, in Foshan,
Guangdong, she was sensitive to the value and position that man had within the
huge production system. She came up with the idea of realizing an artistic
project based on exchange and communication with the factory’s employees
occupying different positions and duties by means of questionnaires. By
throwing up the question “What are you doing here?” to the employees, she
collected their dreams, and presented them through visual ways such as
experimental theater and video, thereby allowing people to see how art can turn
a production system that exists in reality into a “theater.” For her, this
project can be used to further explain how increasingly widespread globalization
has influenced man’s understanding and realization of life values in the Pearl
Delta Region, and even in the entire Chinese society. Therefore, this artistic
project can also serve as an excellent platform for us to observe how Cao Fei’s
“new feeling” blends into specific social space-time.
Text: Hu Fang
Curator and Critic .Vitamin Creative Space.Guangzhou.China.
Translate by Yu Hsiao-Hwei