Born in Beijing
in 1965, Hong Hao graduated from the Printmaking department of
the Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing in 1989. Although he also
studied oil painting, his primary interest was always in the graphic
arts and photography.
The wide range of his interests can be seen in the series of
thirty-one prints known as the Selected Scriptures of Hong Hao
on which he worked intermittently between 1989 and the mid-1990s.
Using visual and literary quotations from a wide range of sources
both ancient and modern, ranging from Sun Tzu’s Art of War
to the literature of the Cultural Revolution, he ranged freely
over current developments in the geopolitical and cultural spheres.
In the New Topographical World Map, for example, countries are
represented according to their international status while in The
Holy Caves characters from the Cultural Revolution substitute
the Buddhist images in the Dunhuang caves. Using between 10 and
100 screens to achieve his effects, the trompe-l’oeil volumes
are densely packed with information. He has spoken of his wish
“to compile a ‘new encyclopedia,’ to put forward
my own understanding of this ever-changing world.”
In a subsequent series of works Scenes from the Metropolis executed
between 1999 and 2000 Hong continued to develop the multilayered
approach of the Selected Scriptures, using a Song Dynasty masterpiece
as the basis for his commentary on contemporary China.
The current exhibition, Hong Hao’s first one-person exhibition
in the United States, is conceived as a Reading Room, a quiet
public space in which books can be considered from many different
viewpoints. A selection from the flattened tomes of Selected Scriptures
provides the background for a display of Hong Hao’s own
books published in limited editions, the traditional string-bound
Selected Scriptures and two albums from Scenes from the Metropolis.
Books are also the theme of a new series of sculptures in which
they are considered not as purveyors of meaning but as objects
that can be handled and treated in different ways.
Immersed in traditional Chinese culture and yet detached from
it, meticulous in his craftsmanship but fully aware of the efficacy
of computers to generate images, Hong Hao is an artist whose insights
into the rapidly developing land of his birth are marked equally
by admiration for the achievements of the past and pleasure in
the accomplishments of the present.
More images from this exhibition