LONDON.- Massimo De Carlo London is presenting The Moon Landing Project, a new series of works by Chinese artist Wang Yuyang.
Wang Yuyang (b.1979, Harbin) graduated from China Central Academy of Drama and the Central Academy of Fine Arts. The artist currently lives in Beijing, where he has been teaching at the School of Experiment Art at the Central Academy of Fine Arts since 2008. Yuyang had his first solo museum exhibition in Europe this year, titled CANDLES FOR LANTERNS at Museo Novecento in Florence.
The moon carries a deep affective power that Wang Yuyang has always been attuned to. In constant synchronous rotation with Earth, the moon for Yuyang represents a universal symbol of mankind, controlling the rhythm of time, tidal movements, rains, weather and seasons.
For his first solo exhibition in London the artist presents The Moon Landing Project, a new series of large-scale canvases, filled with luminescent primary colours, to investigate the depths and significance of the earths only permanent natural satellite a subject that has enthralled the artist for a long time. Each canvas in the exhibition is a scientific replica of the moons entire surface, tainted by a colourful reminiscence of psychedelic abstraction and a conceptual ingenuity that encompasses the scientific and the mystical.
The Moon Landing Project bridges this gap between scientific inquiry and mystical intrigue. Influenced by a series of images from American artist Michael Light, in which the photographer visually documents the voyage to and from the moon with a sense of breathtaking immediacy. Yuyang delightfully translates the voyage in a further emotive sense, experientially conveying the excitement, disorientation, and awe that the astronauts themselves felt as they were shot into space. By painting through black-and-white filtered glasses,Wang Yuyang cannot be fully aware of the colors he is using while realizing his paintings and therefore adding an element of mystery and mythology to an already overcharged theme such as the Moon and the relationship between us and the universe out there.
In addition to the emotive mysticism of the moon, the artist touches upon the widely speculated conspiracy of the moon landing. The Moon Landing Program 4 2009, presents a dual panel video work encased in a metal, replicating what one imagines as a video projected from the inside of a spaceship. In a lighthearted manner, Yuyang addresses the multifarious rumours of the moon landing being a simulation from Dreamworks studio, refreshing interest in the act of the moon landing yet pairing it with the necessity of technological advance.
Closely connected to astrological beliefs, the moon often represents the realm between the conscious and the unconscious. The realism employed by Yuyang embodies a sense of curiosity towards this grey area, illustrating the peaks and craters of the moons surface in uncanny detail, illuminating the canvases like the moon does to our earth at night. In doing so, the artist invites the viewer to contemplate the technicalities and grandiose endeavour of venturing to the moon, and also conjures the mystical power it holds upon mankind.
Wang Yuyang (b.1979, Harbin, China) lives and works in Beijing. Solo exhibitions include: Lucciole per lanterne, Museo Novecento, Florence, I (2019); The Moon, Massimo De Carlo, Hong Kong, HK (2018); Singularity, Heydar Aliyev Center, Baku, AZ (2018); Lettering Folklore of the Cyber World, Chronus Art Center, Shanghai, CN (2015); Tonight I shall meditate on that which I am, Long Museum West Bund, Shanghai, CN (2015); Liner, Copeland Park, London, UK (2015). Group exhibitions include: Edge of the Wonderland, Thailand Biennale, Krabi, TH (2018); As We May Think Forward, 6th Guangzhou Triennial, Guangdong Museum of Art, Guangzhou, CN (2018); Device_art 6.018, Kontejner, Museum of Contemporary Art, Zagreb, HR (2018); Datumsoria: The Return of the Real, ZKM Karlsruhe, Karlsruhe, DE (2017); Unreal. The algorithmic present, Chronus Art Center, Shanghai, CN and HeK House of Electronic Arts, Basel, CH (2017); Poets of Beijing, Wiebengahal, Maastricht (2016); A Beautiful Disorder, Cass Sculpture Foundation, Chichester, UK (2016).