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Lu Yang, Delusional Mandala, 2015, single-channel video © Lu Yang & Société

Micro Era
Media Art from China


Artist: Cao Fei (* 1978), Fang Di (* 1987), Lu Yang (* 1984) and Zhang Peili (* 1957)


Curated by Anna-Catharina Gebbers with co-curators Victor Wang and Yang Beichen, curatorial advisor: Pi Li.
05.09.2019 to 26.01.2020
Kulturforum

A special exhibition of the Nationalgalerie – Staatliche Museen zu Berlin and the Gesellschaft für Deutsch-Chinesischen kulturellen Austausch e.V. (GeKA e.V. 德中文化交流基金会), on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the city partnership Berlin-Beijing, funded by the Lotto Stiftung Berlin.



Cao Fei, "Asia One", 2018, one channel video installation, color, sound / single Chanel video installation, color, sound, 60'20 ''Exhibition view "Micro Era. Media Art from China " , Kulturforum 2019 / Nationalgalerie - Staatliche Museen zu Berlin © Cao Fei / Sprüth Magers & Vitamin Creative Space / Photo: David von Becker


Cao Fei , Asia One, 2018, single channel video installation, color, sound / single channel video installation, color, sound, 63'20 "(video still), © Cao Fei / Sprüth Magers & Vitamin Creative Space


Fang Di , "Minister", 2019, one-channel video installation, color, sound / single-channel video installation, color, sound, 60 'Exhibition view "Micro Era. Media Art from China " , Kulturforum 2019 / Nationalgalerie - Staatliche Museen zu Berlin © Fang Di / Vanguard Gallery / Photo: David von Becker


Fang Di , Minister, 2019, single channel video installation, color, sound / single-channel video installation, color, sound, 60 '(Video Still), © Fang Di / Vanguard Gallery


Lu Yang , "Electromagnetic Brainology", 2017, five-channel video installation, color, sound / five-channel video installation, color, sound, 13'34 ''Exhibition view "Micro Era. Media Art from China " , Kulturforum 2019 / Nationalgalerie - Staatliche Museen zu Berlin © Lu Yang / Société / Photo: David von Becker


Lu Yang , Material World Knight, 2018, three-channel video, multimedia installation, variable dimensions / Three-channel video, multimedia installation, dimensions variable, © Lu Yang / Société


Zhang Peili , Uncertain Pleasure I, 1996 , four-channel twelve-monitor video installation (PAL), color, no sound / four-channel, twelve-screen video installation (PAL), color, silent, 30 '

(In the background: Lu Yang , "Power of Will - Final shooting", 2016
balloon head / inflatable sculpture, UV inkjet printing on PU textile, blower, strobe LED 4-color lighting system, variable dimensions / Balloon head / Inflatable sculpture, UV inkjet print on PU textile, fan, strobe, LED 4-color lighting system, dimensions variable) Exhibition view "Micro Era. Media Art from China " , Kulturforum 2019 / Nationalgalerie - Staatliche Museen zu Berlin © Zhang Peili / Boers-Li Gallery; Lu Yang / Société / Photo: David von Becker



Zhang Peili , Assignment No.1, 1992, six-channel twelve-monitor video installation (PAL), color, no sound / six-channel, twelve-screen video installation (PAL), color, silent, 13 '- 14' (Video Still), © Zhang Peili / Boers-Li Gallery


Zhang Peili , Opposite Space, 1995, Two-Channel Video Installation with Surveillance Cameras and TV Screens, Color / Two-channel video installation with surveillance cameras and TV displays, color, 500 x 140 x 350 cm (Installation View China Artistic Avant-garde Movements, Center d ' Art Santa Monica, Barcelona, Spain, 1995), © Zhang Peili / Boers-Li Gallery 


Zhang Peili , "Opposite Space", 1995
Two-channel video installation with surveillance cameras and television screens, color / Two-channel video installation with surveillance cameras and TV displays, color, 350 x 140 x 500 cm. Exhibition view "Micro Era. Media Art from China " , Kulturforum 2019 / Nationalgalerie - Staatliche Museen zu Berlin © Zhang Peili / Boers-Li Gallery / Photo: David von Becker


Micro Era is tied in with the group exhibition living in time. 29 contemporary artists from China, which was presented in 2001 at the Hamburger Bahnhof – Museum für Gegenwart – Berlin. This exhibition already showed works of Cao Fei as well as Zhang Peili and was also devised by a Chinese-German team of curators, to which, amongst others, Pi Li also belonged. The exhibition showed how contemporary Chinese artists have responded to the economic, political, ideological but also technological changes in China since the 1980s. This approach is now continued with Micro Era.

Installations and Single-Channel Videos


From documentary film images, and the adapted use of classical film language to the aesthetics of Japanese Anime, the works of this exhibition focus on and explore the relationships between mind, body and technology – with installations and single-channel videos ranging from the 1980s to the present. Historically, within the Euro-American context, video art is often regarded as a democratising art form – through the rapid circulation of information and global events by fast-access technologies. Cao Fei, Fang Di, Lu Yang, and Zhang Peili scrutinise the seductive thesis of this democratisation by reflecting in their visual language the mass production of goods as well as how images and virtual subjectivities are produced and consumed, and how we understand our world through imaging technology. At the same time, in the cross-generational exhibition with documentary, narrative and installation references and the expansion into virtual space, the central directions in the development of media art in China are presented.

Cao Fei


Cao Fei (*1978 in Guangzhou, lives in Beijing, China) combines in her films and installations social comments, pop-cultural aesthetics as well as references to surrealism and documentary film. Her works reflect the rapid, chaotic changes that are taking place in today's Chinese society. For "Micro Era" Cao Fei presents her works "Asia One" (2018) and "11.11" (2018) for the first time in Germany. The multimedia installation, which is about the logistics sector, conveys the hyper-real vision of a near future and shows the effects of accelerated economic growth, technological developments and globalization on society. Cao Fei wished to see the young multimedia artist Fang Di as a dialogue partner on her exhibition area.

Fang Di


Fang Di's works (*1987 in Shenzhen, lives in Shenzhen, Guangdong, China) deal with issues of racism in a broader geopolitical context. By incorporating film materials from news and documentaries, his works combine various visual languages in order to critically examine these interconnections. In his first large-scale institutional presentation in Europe so far, Fang Di shows two multimedia-installations and one object. The three works "Minister" (2019), "Sepik River Ring" (2019) and "The Magical of Pipes" (2019) are based on Fang Di's work experience in Papua New Guinea for a Belt and Road Initiative company (which has been pooling China's interests and objectives to build up and expand intercontinental trade and infrastructure networks between the People's Republic of China and over 60 other African, Asian and European countries since 2013). His activities in the South Pacific Island Nation allowed him, analogous to embedded journalism, an intimate documentation of the current social situation.

Lu Yang


Lu Yang (*1984 in Shanghai, lives in Shanghai, China) interweaves virtual and physical architectures in her installations. The artist lures the viewer into the hells of images of an augmented reality and manipulated emotions symbolically represented by transcranial magnetic stimulation. With knowledgeable references to traditional Buddhism, techno religions, cyber feminism and Japanese subcultures, her works circle around gender stereotypes, beliefs in science and post-human ways of life. For "Micro Era", Lu Yang has embedded the largest ever presentation of her works in an installation reminding us of the labyrinthine constructions of Comic Cons. She asked her former professor Zhang Peili for an exhibition dialogue.

Zhang Peili


Zhang Peili (*1957 in Hangzhou, lives in Hangzhou, China) is a pioneer of multimedia art and crucial to the development of the Chinese avant-garde and the emergence and spread of Chinese video art. His early work is often associated with the socio-political events that occurred during the heyday of the '85s New Wave movement, which led to the fact that the notions of xingwei yishu 行为艺术 (performance art) and yingxiang yishu 影像 艺术 (video art) were canonized in China. For "Micro Era", Zhang Peili presents pioneering video art pieces such as "30x30" (1988), "Document on Hygiene No. 3" (1991) and for the first time in Germany the installations "Uncertain Pleasure I" (1996) and "Opposite Space" (1995). The one-channel video work "30x30" (1988) is often referred to as the first video art work produced in China.

Micro Era. Media Art from China is curated by Anna-Catharina Gebbers with co-curators Victor Wang and Yang Beichen, curatorial advisor: Pi Li.

The exhibition project was initiated by Yu Zhang 张 彧, president of the Gesellschaft für Deutsch-Chinesischen kulturellen Austausch e.V. (GeKA e.V. 德中文 化交流基金会). The exhibition concept was developed by Anna-Catharina Gebbers (curator, Hamburger Bahnhof – Museum für Gegenwart – Berlin) in cooperation with Udo Kittelmann (director, Nationalgalerie, Staatliche Museen zu Berlin). Media partner: Deutschlandfunk Kultur.

For the exhibition, Kerber Verlag publishes a publication with prefaces by Michael Müller, Governing Mayor of Berlin, Yu Zhang, and Udo Kittelmann, as well as text contributions by Anna-Catharina Gebbers, Pi Li, Victor Wang and Yang Beichen, 128 pages, 100 illustrations, German / English, ISBN 978-3-7356-0620-4, 30 €.

A special exhibition of the Nationalgalerie – Staatliche Museen zu Berlin and the Gesellschaft für Deutsch-Chinesischen kulturellen Austausch e.V. (GeKA e.V. 德中文化交流基金会), on the occasion of the 25th anniversary of the city partnership Berlin-Beijing, funded by the Lotto Stiftung Berlin. 

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