Thursday, July 17, 2008

The Future of Art




Guy and Myriam Ullens are considered the first buyers of Chinese contemporary art.

In the early 80s the Belgian couple began buying pieces when there wasn't even an art market in China.

They were first intrigued by the work when they were in Hong Kong, but quickly realized they had to go to Beijing to meet the artists and see what was there.

And since then they have amassed a collection of over 1,500 pieces, ranging from oil paintings and photographs, to video and installations.

Last year they bought a giant space in the 798 Art District and turned it into the Ullens Center for Contemporary Art (UCCA).

And today they unveiled their latest exhibition, Our Future: The Guy & Myriam Ullens Foundation Collection.

The show is a combination of old and new acquisitions, as well as site-specific commissions.

And the end result is an interesting mix.

The main exhibition space is very large, with high ceilings. And art work is literally placed everywhere you look without much rhyme or reason.

One of the curators explained the gallery was like a home, and they didn't want to program what people should see or should group together. It was up to the viewers themselves to engage with the works and find their own relationships between the art as well as with themselves.

They have collected everything from Fang Lijun to Ai Weiwei and Qiu Zhijie.

Guy admitted only up until recently were they just buying works without the help of a curator. But it seems like the couple not only has good taste and dares to take chances, but also encourages young artists.

He says the next step now is to nurture the next generation of artists, joking the discussions usually revolve around wine and food.

Ullens himself is a very personable, humble and very dynamic.

They even sponsored an artist to do performance art -- emerge from a silver gray spaceship -- hanging from hooks with his hands laced with strings that were attached to live turtles on the floor.

He just hung there, covered in blue spray paint, and didn't move much.

Don't know if that's supposed to be the future of art, but it's definitely out of the ordinary.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

on a recent trip to new york i happened to view a modern art exhibit at the guggenheim by a chinese artist--cai guo-qiang. it is based on a chinese historical legend. there were nearly one hundred stuffed tigers being wounded by arrows. also there was a boat fillied with arrows. it was sponsored by the robert ho foundation. very interesting, not as outrageous as the panel of used tampons i have seen at the modern art museum in sydney australia.

Anonymous said...

It's really amazing to watch the Asian art market these days, China in particular. Charles Saatchi, British super collector known for the controversial exhibit Sensations, is also frequenting the Asian art market these days. I really would love to see more of it on the web.

Nancy Chen said...

Hi,
I would really like to talk to you about Chinese Contemporary Art, if you are interested, feel free to email me back. nancy.y.chen@gmail.com