Yang Fudong

Chinese artist Yang Fudong’s work reflects the ideals and anxieties of a generation born after the Cultural Revolution, struggling to find their place in the fast-paced changes of society. His films and film-installations feature an a-temporal and dreamlike quality in long and suspended sequences, dividing narratives, and multiple story lines.

Yang calls his protagonists ‘intellectuals’, recalling the tradition of the ‘literati’ in ancient China: artists and intellectuals escaped participation in worldly affairs. His films and photographs bring the literati’s impassive attitude, emptied of any suggestion of agency, from the daydream to the consumerist contexts of contemporary urban China.

In his most recent multi-channel film-installations, Yang shifts his attention more and more toward a reflection on the process of filmmaking, transcending his traditional working process of shooting-editing-screening. Yang Fudong compares these spatial open-ended films to a contemporary form of the Chinese hand scroll.

This book, edited by Philippe Pirotte, includes a comprehensive selection of Yang Fudong’s photographic and film work, as well as newly commissioned theoretical essays by renowned film-scholar Rey Chow, artists and curators Ho Rui An and Colin Chinnery.

English and German text.

£25.00
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